Malorie Albee

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In 1363 Parliament issued a Sumptuary Law that decreed the types of clothes people at different levels of society could wear, and even what they were allowed to eat. These rules were unenforceable—even the majority of pilgrims in The Canterbury Tales wore swankier clothes than were permitted—but the fact that such laws were thought necessary indicates that the lords felt threatened by the conspicuous consumption of the newly affluent commoners.
Pathogenesis: A History of the World in Eight Plagues
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