Batyst
(fr. bavette) – stomacher; a triangular piece of fabric, sometimes richly decorated with lace and ribbons, fastened to the front of a bodice, popular from the 1730s, usually worn with dresses called robes. Sometimes the term also referred to a short women’s cape.
See also: I. Turnau, Słownik ubiorów…, p. 25.
Women's noble court in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the Saxon times. Structure, people, culture, functions
