Court mantua

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Court mantua

Extremely elegant but extremely uncomfortable!

Woven with a design of stripes and scrolling garlands in silver and trimmed with sparkling silver lace, this dress would have left onlookers gazing in awe and wonder.

Court mantua

Why see the court mantua?


This bizarre fashion for enormously-wide dresses fossilized into a kind of uniform that all the ladies at the Georgian court were required to wear. 

Ludicrously impractical, the dresses were worn over whalebone hoops and weighed down with heavy silver thread.   

Who wore this gorgeous creation?

It is believed to have belonged to Mary, Marchioness of Rockingham, who was married to Charles, 2nd Marquis of Rockingham. This dress was probably worn by Lady Rockingham when her husband became Prime Minister. 
 
  

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Downloadable Resources

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    The Court Mantua
    (Adobe PDF, 47.1KB)

Palace Connections

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  • A silky connection

    A court mantua was usually made of silk. A silk merchant was behind the building of the original house that became Kew Palace.

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