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sumptuary law

   Also found in: Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

sumptuary law

Any law restraining excessive individual consumption, such as expenditure on food and dress, or attempting to control religious or moral conduct.

The Romans had several sumptuary laws; for example, the lex Orchia in 181 BC limited the number of dishes at a feast. In England sumptuary laws were introduced by Edward III and Henry VII.

In Japan before the modern era, sumptuary laws were detailed, both prohibiting the farmers and merchants from the use of certain materials (such as silk) and restricting the consumption of the nobles and samurai (for example, specifying the maximum number of palanquins at a wedding). One government, around 1800, went so far as to decree that people below a certain income must not buy anything new at all, and that women must dress their own hair.



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These clothes and trinkets they were wearing were as fine and dainty as the shrewdest stretch of the sumptuary laws allowed to people of their degree; and in these pretty clothes, she crying on his shoulder, and he trying to comfort her with hopeful words set to the music of despair, they went from the judgment seat out into the world homeless, bedless, breadless; why, the very beggars by the road- sides were not so poor as they.
The guests were now seated at the table laden with the first course, which they ate as provincials eat, without shame at possessing a good appetite, and not as in Paris, where it seems as if jaws gnashed under sumptuary laws, which made it their business to contradict the laws of anatomy.
 
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