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(Vavavooom!) 600-year-old bra and underwear discovered in an Austrian castle
IO9 ^ | Jul 18, 2012 | Annalee Newitz

Posted on 07/20/2012 10:24:09 PM PDT by DogByte6RER

600-year-old bra and underwear discovered in an Austrian castle

Photobucket

Contemporary bras are more comfortable, modified versions of corsets — or so it was believed, until a 2007 discovery changed the way we see women's underwear. Working with a team of her colleagues, archaeologist Beatrix Nutz recently publicized her discovery of several linen bras and some underwear in a medieval castle.

Nutz has presented academic papers about her discovery, and even analyzed the underwear for DNA (see picture). But the public didn't hear about the medieval bras until a BBC history program showed pictures of them. Nutz and colleagues also found a pair of men's underwear (pictured below) — apparently medieval women wore no panties.

600-year-old bra and underwear discovered in an Austrian castle, science,lingerie,panties,bra

What this means is that women were wearing bras long before the invention of corsets. So corsets have been revealed as the uncomfortable, restrictive version of bras. Does that mean the middle ages were actually a more liberal time than the corset-obsessed eighteenth and nineteenth centuries?

600-year-old bra and underwear discovered in an Austrian castle, panties,underwear,ancient

(Excerpt) Read more at io9.com ...


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; History; Miscellaneous; Science; Society; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: ancienthistory; anthropology; archaeology; austria; beatrixnutz; bra; corset; godsgravesglyphs; lingerie; medieval; skivvies; talesfromthecrypt; underwear
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To: DogByte6RER

Don’t think they shaved legs back then either.


41 posted on 07/21/2012 6:48:18 AM PDT by jughandle
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To: SunkenCiv
Austria? Probably something like this.


42 posted on 07/21/2012 6:55:09 AM PDT by csvset
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To: Taffini

We have so many advantages over our ancestors—

Newsday (LI NY)did a story on the actual medical/physical condition of our founding fathers and their level of common daily discomfort. It was shocking how much pain these people suffered even as they were founding our country.


43 posted on 07/21/2012 7:10:27 AM PDT by TalBlack
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To: dfwgator; DogByte6RER

“Das nennt man die Wunderbar Wunderbra, Ja!”

“Ja...she haf der kleinen sitzen und der grossen titzen.”

Stopenzie Floppin!


44 posted on 07/21/2012 7:15:33 AM PDT by PoloSec ( Believe the Gospel: how that Christ died for our sins, was buried and rose again)
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To: TalBlack

People keep talking how stressful life is now...I say look back in time and I doubt that anyone would want to go back to the days when clothes were washed and wrung by hand in a wooden tub, we had no flushing toilets or modern sewer systems, no modern dental equipment, no deodorant, no cars, no planes, no paved roads, no antibiotics, no modern “lady” products, no sewing machines, no air conditioning, no right and left shoes, and on and on. We don’t know what stress is compared to those who came before us.


45 posted on 07/21/2012 7:26:49 AM PDT by Taffini ( Mr. Pippen and Mr. Waffles do not approve and neither do I)
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To: Isabel C.
I hope you realize that people bathed very infrequently back then

I hope you realize that that is a myth.

http://www.gallowglass.org/jadwiga/herbs/baths.html

Like the nonsensical idea that spices were used to disguise the taste of rotten meat, the idea that bathing was forbidden and/or wiped out between the fall of Rome and the Enlightenment has been touted by many gullible writers, including Smithsonian magazine.

However, even the Smithsonian in the person of Jay Stuller has to admit that "Gregory the Great, the first monk to become pope, allowed Sunday baths and even commended them, so long as they didn't become a 'time-wasting luxury' . . . medieval nobility routinely washed their hands before and after meals. Etiquette guides of the age insisted that teeth, face and hands be cleaned each morning.

Shallow basins and water jugs for washing hair were found in most manor houses, as was the occasional communal tub..."

"In the first volume of Janssen's History of the German People there are many details concerning the popular use of baths in Germany during the Middle Ages.

Men bathed several times each day; some spent the whole day in or about their favorite springs. From the 20th of May to the 9th of June, 1511, Lucas Rem bathed one hundred and twenty-seven times, as we may see by his diary" (p. 291-292).

46 posted on 07/21/2012 7:40:40 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("I love to hear you talk talk talk, but I hate what I hear you say."-Del Shannon)
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To: varyouga
Women of child-bearing age were starving and/or pregnant their entire lives up until very recently in human history. They usually died well before the age of 40 and often during one of their many pregnancies. Periods were the exception in a female’s life rather than the norm.

That is a gross generalization that does not apply to much of Europe. At very least you recognize that there were convents filled with non-pregnant, fertile women. I know of no Christian society that tolerated the killing of women for being barren or living past child-bearing years. The Christian rules regarding fasting would make no sense in a starving society. You should read more about medieval Europe.
47 posted on 07/21/2012 7:57:03 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("I love to hear you talk talk talk, but I hate what I hear you say."-Del Shannon)
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To: martin_fierro; DogByte6RER; Charles Henrickson

Apparently for utility these were all nursing bras...


48 posted on 07/21/2012 9:42:12 AM PDT by mikrofon (Bra Exit, Nutz)
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To: DogByte6RER; freedumb2003; NicknamedBob

Free, I told you not to pass that photo around! LOL!

‘Face


49 posted on 07/21/2012 9:59:22 AM PDT by Monkey Face (Sometimes, I laugh so hard that tears run down my leg.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Sound this out:

Be a trix Nutz.


50 posted on 07/21/2012 10:33:45 AM PDT by wildbill (You're just jealous because the Voices talk only to me.)
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To: SunkenCiv

No.

You are not getting a Mangled Genitals Ping.

Go to your room.


51 posted on 07/21/2012 10:47:01 AM PDT by martin_fierro (Bea Nutz)
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To: wildbill; martin_fierro

Tough room. ;’) :’D


52 posted on 07/21/2012 11:43:25 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: Dr. Sivana

I consider 2000 years very recent in human history. Even 10,000 years is quite recent. Modern humans can directly match their genomes to DNA that is 50,000 years old but it is believed that our species existed 200,000 years ago.

For the great majority of our history, we had ‘society’ that was barely above the level of apes. The climate that humans and apes thrive in (warm and moist) ensured very few remains were left for us to study.


53 posted on 07/21/2012 11:51:25 AM PDT by varyouga
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To: varyouga

Much of what you stated here is open to debate and questions. In any event, we were discussing this in the context of a 600 year old bra, not a 6,000 year old bra.


54 posted on 07/21/2012 2:45:29 PM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("I love to hear you talk talk talk, but I hate what I hear you say."-Del Shannon)
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To: varyouga

I think you should read more historical accounts, and less theoretical deconstructionist “women’s studies” screeds.


55 posted on 07/21/2012 6:05:32 PM PDT by LexBaird (Tyrannosaurus Lex, unapologetic carnivore)
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To: LexBaird; Dr. Sivana
“I think you should read more historical accounts, and less theoretical deconstructionist “women’s studies” screeds.”

The great majority of human history has no written historical accounts and very few physical remains. How many events in 50-200,000 years of human history have been accurately reported, recorded and can be accepted as unbiased fact today? Maybe 0.01% (one 10,000th) so of course most information about that time period is theoretical.

However, when looking at our overall physiology, sex differences, psychology and instincts it becomes obvious how brutal most of our history was. Early history is ingrained in who we are and our minds/bodies ARE the historical account. Civilization is a thin and very recent veneer that frequently shows cracks, even in our otherwise highly modern world.

BTW, I'm not a woman and have no connection at all to “women's studies”. I simply have have a deep interest in understanding our early history and have traveled a great deal all around the world to better do so.

56 posted on 07/22/2012 1:23:28 PM PDT by varyouga
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To: varyouga; LexBaird
most information about that time period is theoretical.

Agreed, but you stated your theoretical conclusions without qualification or condition in your original post.
57 posted on 07/22/2012 2:39:52 PM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("I love to hear you talk talk talk, but I hate what I hear you say."-Del Shannon)
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To: arderkrag

I’m sorry, I didn’t explain my point in my first post. What I meant was they found a few bras and not much else. How do we know this was the norm. Maybe there was lots of other underwear, maybe not. The problem with this sort of *science* is it extrapolates much from very little. That’s all I’m saying.


58 posted on 07/23/2012 2:00:55 PM PDT by brytlea (An ounce of chocolate is worth a pound of cure)
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To: brytlea

Ah, I see your point. I agree, it does take some leaps of reasoning.


59 posted on 07/23/2012 4:07:22 PM PDT by arderkrag (ABOs are Romneybot trolls. LOOKING FOR ROLEPLAYERS. Check Profile.)
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To: arderkrag

We just need a time machine. :)


60 posted on 07/23/2012 4:18:46 PM PDT by brytlea (An ounce of chocolate is worth a pound of cure)
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