Phrygian cap

Phrygian cap

The Phrygian cap is a soft, red, conical cap with the top pulled forward, worn in antiquity by the inhabitants of Phrygia, a region of central Anatolia. In sculpture, paintings and caricatures it represents freedom and the pursuit of liberty.

Early history

In Antiquity, the Phrygian cap had two connotations: for the Greeks as showing a distinctive Eastern influence of non-Greek "barbarism" (in the classical sense) and among the Romans as a badge of liberty. The Phrygian cap identifies Trojans such as Paris in vase-paintings and sculpture, and it is worn by the syncretic Hellenistic and Roman saviour god Mithras and by the Anatolian god Attis. The twins Castor and Pollux wear a superficially similar round cap called the "pileus."

The Phrygian cap was also worn by King Midas to hide his donkey ears given to him as a curse by Apollo. Some variations of the myth note that Midas' subjects mistakenly took this to be a fashion statement and started wearing the tall peaked caps.

In vase-paintings and other Greek art, the Phrygian cap serves to identify the Trojan hero Paris as non-Greek; Roman poets habitually use the epithet "Phrygian" to mean Trojan. The Phrygian cap can also be seen on the Trajan's Column carvings, worn by the Dacians, and on the Arch of Septimius Severus worn by the Parthians.

The Macedonian, Thracian, Dacian and 12th century Norman military helmets had a forward peaked top resembling the Phrygian cap. The same soft cap is seen worn by an attendant in the murals of a late 4th century Thracian tomb at Kazanlak, Bulgaria ( [http://www.digsys.bg/books/cultural_heritage/thracian/thracian-intro.html illustrated] ).

In late Republican Rome, the cap of freedmen served as a symbol of freedom from tyranny. A coin issued by Brutus in Asia Minor 44-42 BC, showed one posed between two daggers [An example from the De Salis collection, in the .

Revolutionary icon

During the 18th century, the red Phrygian cap evolved into a symbol of freedom, held aloft on a Liberty Pole during the American Revolutionary War.

The cap was especially adopted during the French Revolution, [Richard Wrigley, "Transformations of a revolutionary emblem: The Liberty Cap in the french Revolution, "French History" 11(2) 1997:131-169.] along with other symbols adopted from classical Antiquity: to this day the national emblem of France, Marianne, is shown wearing a Phrygian cap. The "bonnet rouge", which eventually appeared on almost every conceivable manufactured article, made its appearance early in the Revolution. It was first seen publicly in May 1790, at a festival in Troyes adorning a statue representing the nation, and at Lyon, on a lance carried by the goddess Liberty. [Albert Mathiez, "Les origines des cultes révolutionnaires, 1789-1792" (Paris 1904:34).] In 1792, when Louis XVI was induced to sign a constitution, popular prints of the king were doctored to show him wearing the "bonnet rouge". [Harris 1981:284, fig. 1. Most of the details that follow are drawn from Ms Harris.] The bust of Voltaire was crowned with the red bonnet of liberty after a performance of his "Brutus" at the Comédie-Française in March 1792. The spire of the cathedral in Strasbourg was crowned with a "bonnet rouge" in order to prevent it from being torn down in 1794. [ [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strasbourg Wikipedia: 'Strasbourg"] ] By wearing the red Phrygian cap the Paris "sans-culottes" made their Revolutionary ardour and plebeian solidarity immediately recognizable. During the period of the Great Terror, the cap was adopted defensively even by those who might be denounced as moderates or aristocrats and were especially keen to advertise their adherence to the new regime.

The cap was also incorporated into the symbol of the late 18th century Irish revolutionary organisation the Society of the United Irishmen. The English Radicals of 1819 and 1820 often wore a white "cap of liberty" on public occasions.

American symbolism

[
thumb|Seated Liberty Dollar, with Phrygian cap on a pole (1871).]

The Phrygian cap is used to symbolize liberty in numerous artifacts in the Americas. For example, an effigy of "Liberty" was shown holding the Liberty Pole and Phrygian cap on some early United States of America coinage. The U.S. Army has, since 1778, utilized a "War Office Seal" in which the motto "This We'll Defend" is displayed directly over a Phrygian cap on an upturned sword. It also appears on the state flags of West Virginia, New Jersey, and New York, as well as the official seal of the United States Senate (left), the arms of the North Carolina Senate, [Citation
contribution =Senate of North Carolina
title =College of Arms Newsletter, No. 8 (March 2006)
place =London
publisher =College of Arms
id =
url = http://www.college-of-arms.gov.uk/Newsletter/008.htm
accessdate =2008-01-13
] and on the reverse side of the Seal of Virginia.

Many of the anti-colonial revolutions in Mexico and South America were heavily inspired by the imagery and slogans of the American and French Revolutions. As a result, the cap has appeared on the coats of arms of many Latin American nations.

The cap had also been displayed on certain Mexican coins (most notably the old 8 reales coin) through the late 19th century into the mid 20th century. Today, it is featured on the coats of arms or national flags of Nicaragua, El Salvador, Argentina, Colombia, Haiti, Cuba, Bolivia and Paraguay.

In 1854, when sculptor Thomas Crawford was preparing models for sculpture for the United States Capitol, Secretary of War Jefferson Davis (later to be the President of the Confederate States of America) insisted that a Phrygian cap not be included on a statue of "Justice" on the grounds that, "American liberty is original and not the liberty of the freed slave" (Gale, p. 124). The cap was not included in the final marble version that is now in the building.

The seal of Dickinson College, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, also contains a Liberty Cap. The college, endowed by Founding Father John Dickinson at the behest of Benjamin Rush, was the first to be chartered in the new Republic.

Washington Irving also propounded the surprise of his famous protagonist, Rip Van Winkle, by noting among the unexpected details of the re-awakened Rip's newly post-revolutionary village a "tall naked pole, with something on it that looked like a red night cap..."

A Phrygian cap is worn by "Bonhomme Carnaval", the official symbol and ambassador of the Quebec Winter Carnival.

Use in coat of arms

*Coat of arms of Argentina
*Coat of arms of Bolivia
*Coat of arms of Colombia
*Coat of arms of Cuba
*Coat of arms of El Salvador
*Coat of arms of Haiti
*Coat of arms of Nicaragua
*Reverse side of the Flag of Paraguay

Medical term

"Phrygian cap" is also a term used for an anatomical variant of the gallbladder seen in 1-6% of patients who have ultrasound exams or contrast studies of their gallbladders. It is caused by a fold or division at the point where the tip of the gallbladder (the head) joins the main part of the gallbladder (the body), and is named for its resemblance to the cap above. Apart from being the chance of being mistaken for stones on ultrasound, it has no other medical implications nor does it predispose one to other diseases.

Literary references

*The revolutionist protagonists of Robert A. Heinlein's "The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress" often wear a liberty cap. It is referred to exclusively as such. It becomes a fashion article at one point, and is once placed on a telephone terminal open to the A.I. character "Mike."
*The popular comic / cartoon characters The Smurfs, are famous for their white Phrygian caps. Their leader, Papa Smurf wears a red one.
*Cornish piskies wear Phrygian caps symbolising proto-Celtic origins and magical powers in "Mystic Rose - Celtic Fire" by Toney Brooks.
*The song "Then She Appeared" by rock group XTC contains the line "Dressed in tricolour and Phrygian cap"

ources

*Gale, Robert L. "Thomas Crawford: American Sculptor". University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, 1964.
*Harris, Jennifer. "The Red Cap of Liberty: A Study of Dress Worn by French Revolutionary Partisans 1789-94" "Eighteenth-Century Studies" 14.3 (Spring 1981:283-312).

ee also

*Barretina
*Liberty cap (Psilocybe semilanceata)
*Pileus (hat)

Notes


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Phrygian cap — Phryg i*an cap A close fitting cap represented in Greek art as worn by Orientals, assumed to have been conical in shape. It has been adopted in modern art as the so called {liberty cap}, or {cap of liberty}. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Phrygian cap — a soft, conical cap represented in ancient Greek art as part of Phrygian or oriental dress and associated, since the late 18th and early 19th centuries, with the liberty cap. [1840 50] * * *       soft felt or wool conical headdress fitting… …   Universalium

  • phrygian cap — noun Usage: usually capitalized P : a close fitting cap represented in Greek art as conical and identified in modern art with the liberty cap compare bonnet rouge …   Useful english dictionary

  • PHRYGIAN CAP —    a cap worn by the Phrygians, and worn in modern times as the symbol of freedom …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Phrygian cap — 9th to end of 12th century. Common pointed cap with the apex turned over slightly towards the front …   Medieval glossary

  • Phrygian cap — the normal radiological appearance of the tip of the gall bladder, seen in a minority of cholecystograms (see cholecystography). Its name is derived from its resemblance to the characteristic Balkan headgear. * * * the appearance of the… …   Medical dictionary

  • Phrygian cap — the normal radiological appearance of the tip of the gall bladder, seen in a minority of cholecystograms (see cholecystography). Its name is derived from its resemblance to the characteristic Balkan headgear …   The new mediacal dictionary

  • Phrygian — late 15c., native of Phrygia, region in ancient Asia Minor; Phrygian mode in Greek music theory is from 1570s (it was held to be of a warlike character ). Phrygian cap (1796) was the type adopted by freed slaves in Roman times, and subsequently… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Phrygian — can refer to: *A person from Phrygia *Phrygian cap once characteristic of the region * Phrygian language *Phrygian mode in music * Phrygian Valley, a historic location in northwestern Turkey …   Wikipedia

  • cap of liberty — Phrygian cap Phryg i*an cap A close fitting cap represented in Greek art as worn by Orientals, assumed to have been conical in shape. It has been adopted in modern art as the so called {liberty cap}, or {cap of liberty}. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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