Hennin
The hennin /ˈhɛnᵻn/ (Dutch: henninck ‘cock’ > French: hennin[1]) was a headdress in the shape of a cone or "steeple", or truncated cone worn in the late Middle Ages by European women of the nobility.[2] They were most common in Burgundy and France, but also elsewhere, especially at the English courts,[3] and in Northern Europe, Hungary and Poland. They are little seen in Italy. It is unclear what styles the word hennin described at the time, though it is recorded as being used in French in 1428, probably before the conical style appeared. The word does not appear in English until the 19th century.[4] The term is therefore used by some writers on costume for other female head-dresses of the period.[5]
Conical hennins
These appear from about 1430 onwards,[6] especially after the mid-century, initially only among aristocratic women, though later spreading more widely, especially in the truncated form. Typically, the hennin was 30 to 45 cm high, but might be considerably higher, as much as 80 cm according to some sources. The tops of some of these conical hats were pointed while others were truncated, ending in a flat top. It was generally accompanied by a veil, formally termed a cointoise, that usually emerged from the top of the cone and was allowed to fall onto the woman's shoulders or even to the ground, or was pulled forward over the hennin, often reaching over the woman's face.
The hennin was worn tilted backward at an angle. It was made of light material, often card or a wire mesh over which a light fabric was fixed, although little is known of the details of their construction. There was often a cloth lappet, or "cornet" in French,[7] in front of the hennin covering part of the brow, and sometimes falling onto the shoulders to either side. There is very often a "frontlet" or short loop seen on the forehead (right), to adjust the hennin forward, and perhaps even to hold it on in wind.[8]
It was fashionable to pluck or shave the forehead to raise the hairlines.[9] The hair was tied tightly on the scalp and usually hidden inside the cone (possibly one end of the veil was tied to the hair and wrapped round, with the free end being pulled through the hole at the tip of the cone). However some images show long hair worn loose behind the hennin.
Nowadays, the hennin forms part of the costume of the stereotypical fairy tale princess. There are some manuscript illuminations that show princesses or queens wearing small crowns either round the brim or at the top of the hennin; it is likely that the very small crown of Margaret of York, Duchess of Burgundy (now in the Treasury of Aachen Cathedral) was worn like this for her famously lavish wedding celebrations in 1468.
Definition
Various writers on costume history use hennin to cover a variety of different styles. Almost all agree that the steeple-cone style was a hennin, and the truncated ("flowerpot") versions, and many also include the heart-shaped open-centred fabric tubes of the earlier part of the century. Some also use the term to cover beehive-shaped fabric head-coverings of the mid-century (as in the Van der Weyden workshop painting in the Gallery). Others also use it for the head-dresses divided to right and left of the early part of the century, such as those in which Christine de Pisan is usually depicted (see Gallery). In some of these only white cloth is visible, but in later examples worn by aristocrats rich fabric can be seen through translucent veils. Some use it for the horned hairstyle with a wimple on top.
The Chronique of Enguerrand de Monstrelet records that in 1428, in what seems to be the first record of the term "hennin", the radical Carmelite friar Thomas Conecte railed against extravagant headdresses of...
...the noble ladies, and all others, who dressed their heads in so ridiculous a manner, and who spent such large sums on such luxuries of fashion.[10]
Thomas urged street boys to chase after such ladies and pluck off their headdresses, crying "Au hennin!", even granting indulgences to those who did so, although as so often in medieval documentary records, no clue as to the form of the "hennins" is given.[11] Based on the evidence from visual records, they were probably not conical head-dresses, which are first seen slightly later. The Catalan poet Gabriel Mòger mocked the "tall deformed hat" (lonch cap deformat) that was popular with Majorcan women of the time.[12]
Gallery
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15th century – head dress of jeweled velvet and lawn
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15th century – varieties of the hennin headdress
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Maria Portinari of Bruges wearing a high but still truncated hennin with a veil hanging from the top and black lappets or (possibly) underhood, 1476–78.
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Barbara van Vlaendenbergh wearing a truncated hennin, Burgundy, ca. 1480
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Hennin worn with braids, Hans Holbein the Elder, 1500–01. By now hennins had reached Basel in Switzerland, but were rather out of date in Paris or Burgundy.
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Christine de Pisan presents her book to Queen Isabeau of France. She and her ladies wear jewelled heart-shaped stuffed or hollow "bourrelets" on top of hair dressed in horns. Christine wears a divided hennin covered in white cloth.
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Isabella of Portugal, Duchess of Burgundy in a divided hennin. Copy of original of 1445–50.
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Jean Fouquet, France c.1455–60. The ladies-in-waiting wear very high divided hennins.
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Divided hennin
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Hair is pulled back in an embroidered "beehive" hennin and covered by a short veil. The veil reaches the eyebrows. Burgundy, ca. 1455.
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Portrait of a Young Girl, Petrus Christus. A truncated hennin, fashionable in the Low countries the 1460s.
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Workshop of Rogier van der Weyden, Portrait of a young woman of the Burgundian gentry wearing a "beehive" or perhaps truncated cone hennin, 1460s. Part of the veil comes forward to cover the eyebrows.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Le Nouveau Petit Robert: Dictionnaire alphabétique et analogique de la langue française, s.v. hennin. Paris: Dictionnaires Le Robert, 1993. ISBN 2-85036-506-8.
- ↑ "Cornet" from Herbert Norris, Medieval costume and fashion 1999 (orig 1927 :445–48.
- ↑ Norris shows examplesfrom the reigns of Henry VI and Edward IV
- ↑ OED, "Hennin"
- ↑ Piponnier and Mane are among the writers who use it, just for conical head-dresses, p. 80
- ↑ Piponnier & Mane, 80
- ↑ some use "cornet" as a term for the conical element also.
- ↑ M. Vibbert, "Headdresses of the 14th and 15th Centuries," The Compleat Anachronist, No. 133, SCA monograph series (August 2006)
- ↑ "A New Look for Women." Arts and Humanities Through the Eras. Gale. 2005. Retrieved August 13, 2012 from HighBeam Research: http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G2-3427400451.html
- ↑ Online text of the Chronique in English - 19th century translation. Quoted in Norris 1999:445. French text here
- ↑ A Cyclopedia Of Costume Vol. II A General History Of Costume In Europe of 1819 By James Robinson Planche
- ↑ Martí de Riquer i Morera (1964), Història de la Literatura Catalana, vol. 1 (Barcelona: Edicions Ariel), 632.
References
- Boucher, François: 20,000 Years of Fashion, Harry Abrams, 1966.
- Kohler, Carl: A History of Costume, Dover Publications reprint, 1963, ISBN 0-486-21030-8
- Laver, James: The Concise History of Costume and Fashion, Abrams, 1979
- Payne, Blanche: History of Costume from the Ancient Egyptians to the Twentieth Century, Harper & Row, 1965. No ISBN for this edition; ASIN B0006BMNFS
- Françoise Piponnier and Perrine Mane; Dress in the Middle Ages; Yale UP, 1997; ISBN 0-300-06906-5
- Vibbert, Marie, Headdresses of the 14th and 15th Centuries, The Compleat Anachronist, No. 133, SCA monograph series (August 2006)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hennins. |
- Images of Burgundian conical hennins
- Constructing the Headdresses of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, paper by Marie Vibbert (Lyonnete Vibert), Known World Costume Symposium Proceedings (2005).
- (French) Coiffures féminines — Le Hennin
- Burgundian wedding c.1470, from the Getty, with a great variety of head-dresses.