![]() In Medieval England, a sumptuary law banned decedent feasts involving an overconsumption of meat. In Scotland, regulations went even further and regulated the type and amount of meat that could be used in a meat pie for those who held the rank of baron or higher (presumably because those below the rank of baron could not afford to eat that much meat anyways). The law demanded gentlemen and merchants only eat one meal of fish or flesh per day. In Medieval England, strict laws were passed in order to reign in the “outrageous and excessive multitude of meats and dishes which the great men of the Kingdom had used, and still used, in their castles” (Encyclopedia Britannica). For similar reasons, the Puritans of Massachusetts Bay Colony ruled that only people of great personal wealth (at least £200) could wear lace, silver or gold thread, embroidered clothes, ruffles, or capes. For example, the Islamic teachings of the Quran and Hadith forbid men from wearing clothes made of silk or jewelry made of gold, as this would indicate vanity and excessive pride (note these rules did not apply to women). There are many other examples of sumptuary laws. It was made of gold and Tyrian purple from Constantinople. As David Jacoby writes, “no Byzantine emperor nor any Latin ruler in former Byzantine territories could muster the financial resources required for the pursuit of murex purple production” (Jacoby quoted in Little Art Talks, 2015).Ī fragment of the shroud in which the Emperor Charlemagne was buried in 814. The fad for Tyrian purple ended abruptly with the sacking of Constantinople in 1204. ![]() Esteemed Roman senators would be allowed to wear a Tyrian purple stripe on their toga. Indeed, the symbol of a position in office was a Tyrian purple robe trimmed with gold thread. ![]() The Giant Eastern Murex with its vibrant purple color ( Ryan Somman / Flickr )ĭue to the high cost and intensive production, Rome passed a sumptuary law that declared only the elite of the Roman Empire could wear a garment of so decedent a color. More importantly, it was worth more than its weight in gold. The dye produced a striking color, ranging from lush purple to deep crimson, and would not fade in the sunlight. A great deal of these shellfish would have to be obtained – “Twelve thousand snails of Murex brandaris yield no more than 1.4 grams of pure dye, enough to color only the trim of single garment” (Jacoby quoted in Little Art Talks, 2015). The Buccinum species lived on the rocks of relatively shallow water while the bigger Murex lived in deep water and had to be dredged up from as low as 25 fathoms. The two shellfish that produced the color (the Purpura pelagia or Murex trunculus and Murex brandaris as well as the Purfura lapillus or Buccinum lapillus ) were native to the eastern Mediterranean shores of the Phoenician empire, in what is modern day Lebanon. Tyrian purple dye was made by the Phoenicians, particularly those of Carthage. The vibrant color could only be made from a dye extracted from shellfish and was incredibly difficult to manufacture. The classic example of a sumptuary law is the ancient Roman prohibition on wearing clothing that was Tyrian purple. Laws that regulate consumption have been passed throughout human civilization and continue to exist in the modern world (even in the United States). Sumptuary laws were also passed by religious institutions in order to prevent temptation and ensure moral behavior. These laws forbade ordinary citizens from obtaining food, clothing, or goods made of a particular material in order to reinforce social hierarchies. In previous eras, however, consumption could be directly regulated through the passage of sumptuary laws. Today, this is done through marketing and price setting (a prominent example is the strict control of the number of diamonds allowed to enter the global market). Throughout history, the rich and powerful have attempted to control access to items considered luxurious or status symbols.
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