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Graduation Cap and Gown History.

May 20, 2018

Image: The University of Paris in the 14th century (left) and 16th century - Wikipedia

 It's the end of the academic year and graduations abound across the world.  In this article from graduationsource.com, we find out the history if why graduates wear robes and headgear for the ceremony.
 
Many people may not think too deeply about the academic apparel required for their graduation ceremony. For some it’s a one-time thing, for ambitious students and faculty, it’s an occasional outfit worn to distinguish rites of passage. Similar to getting married, graduation is an important cultural tradition that has three ritualistic steps. First, walking into the ceremony is a separation of society. Second, is inculcation to transformation and lastly returning to society with a new status. A graduation cap and gown history is a long one, going back centuries.
 
A White Coat Ceremony, Marriage, and Graduation are all prime examples of “rites of passage” a person may experience in their lifetime
 
Why Wear Caps and Gowns?
 
The question remains, why do we wear a cap and gown while completing these milestones? Academic regalia came to fruition when universities started forming in the 12th and 13th centuries. Students and teachers typically wore clerical clothing because the church was highly influential at this time. Many professors were priests, monks or clerics and their students were usually studying to do something similar. Historians believe scholars wore long robes and hoods to keep warm in these unheated buildings.
 
The significance of the hood dates back to Celtic Groups and Druid priests who wore capes with hoods that symbolized higher intelligence and superiority.
 
Medieval Times
 
While medieval universities initially inspired the academic dress, the first recognized schools that officiated graduation attire were Oxford and Cambridge. By 1321, they forbade “excessive apparel” in universities requiring everyone to wear long gowns during ceremonies to create unity.
 
The graduation hat has changed throughout the centuries and with many variations. The most prevalent style is the mortarboard cap which pairs with standard graduation gowns. These caps are believed to have been developed in the 15th century evolving from hats known as birettas used by Catholic clerics, scholars, and professors. The origin of the biretta dates back as far as 1311 in churches.
 
Distinctive Shapes
 
You may wonder, what is with that cardboard square shape? The answer is debatable. Most historians believe it merely signifies the form of a book to give a scholarly appearance or is meant to represent the shape of the quad within the Oxford.
 
The mortarboard borrows its name from the flat board used by bricklayers to lay mortar. Therefore, some people believe the reason the cap is square because it represents the mortar board of a master workman. Despite the uncertainty of origin, the style has remained accepted and popular at most educational institutions.
 
This original European academic style was pervasive throughout the centuries and even into colonial America. After the Civil War, academic regalia was reserved strictly for graduation. For that reason, the cap and gown symbolize recognition and achievement. While hoods are no longer in use for warmth, they remain in use as a decorative piece representing one’s field of study.
 
Until the 1950’s, graduation caps and gowns were typically gray in the USA. Within this decade, students became more interested in using different colors to represent their school the way European countries have been doing since the 1800s. Since color photos were expensive and uncommon until the 1960’s, most graduation shots were still in black and white. However, the general look of academic regalia seems timeless in the past few centuries. In conclusion, the cap and gown tradition has been alive and evolving for centuries and will always remain an important part of one’s academic experience.


 


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