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The wardrobe accounts of Queen Elizabeth mention the purchase of thousands of special "great verthingale pynnes", "myddle verthingale pynnes", and "smale verthingale pynnes" from 1563. [48] These were probably used for pinning deep tucks in fathingales to hold whalebone supports, and to position heavy silk skirts in place over the farthingale.
Following Queen Victoria's death in 1901, an appointment for Keeper of the Royal Archives was made by Edward VII to safeguard the Queen’s “collection of official and private correspondence.” [3] At the behest of George V, this archive along with other royal collections were relocated for storage and display within the Round Tower of Windsor Castle in 1914. [3]
A half-timbered granary from 1745. The Galiny estate currently consists of several historic parts: a palace complex with the main palace and farm buildings, most of which today house a guesthouse and the owners' living quarters, and farm buildings with old stables, which house a stud farm [6] and rooms for the needs of a 200-hectare farm.
Old Palace Yard (the former Great Courtyard of Richmond Palace, and known as Wardrobe Court until 1838) [5] is a curving street running off Old Palace Lane and connecting it with Richmond Green. [6] It contains the only main surviving structure from the former palace, its Tudor gatehouse , which is at the entrance with the Green. [ 7 ]
The Will of King Eadred, AD 951–955, with bequests to hræglðene (robe-keepers) (15th-century copy, British Library Add MS 82931, ff. 22r–23r) [3]. In the Middle Ages persons of wealth and power often slept in a chamber (Latin camera), alongside which a secure room or wardrobe (garderoba) would be provided for storage of clothes and other valuables.
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