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Mantua

Leconte (Madame)

The Victoria and Albert Museum

The Victoria and Albert Museum
London, United Kingdom

This is a magnificent example of English court dress of the mid-18th century. It would have been worn by a woman of aristocratic birth for court events involving the royal family. The style of this mantua was perfectly suited for maximum display of wealth and art; this example contains almost 10lb weight of silver thread worked in an elaborate 'Tree of Life' Design. The train is signed 'Rec'd of Mdme Leconte by me Magd. Giles'. The name Leconte has been associated with Huguenot embroideresses working in London between 1710 and 1746. The Huguenots were French Protestants who, following the repressive measures against them that the Catholic monarch Louis XIV of France restarted in 1685, emigrated to Britain and elsewhere.

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  • Title: Mantua
  • Creator: Leconte (Madame)
  • Date Created: 1740/1745
  • Location: England
  • Physical Dimensions: Width: 192 cm Hem at bottom of petticoat
  • Provenance: Given by Lord and Lady Cowdray
  • Medium: Silk, linen, silk thread, linen thread, 14 types of silver thread, silver strip, silver frisé, silver spangles; hand-woven, hand-embroidered, hand-sewn
The Victoria and Albert Museum

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