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{{short description|Type of cap used in academic dress}}
{{Redirect|Mortarboard|the honor society|Mortar Board}}
{{About|the garment|the honor society|Mortar Board|the device used by builders|Hawk (plasterer's tool)}}
[[Image:LinusPaulingGraduation1922.jpg|thumb||right|[[Graduation]] portrait of [[Linus Pauling]] wearing a mortarboard, 1922]]
[[Image:LinusPaulingGraduation1922.jpg|thumb|right|[[Graduation]] portrait of [[Linus Pauling]] wearing a mortarboard, 1922]]
The '''square academic cap''', '''graduate cap''', or '''mortarboard'''<ref>[http://www.bartleby.com/61/1/M0430100.html mortarboard. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> (because of its similarity in appearance to the [[hawk (plasterer's tool)|hawk]] used by [[bricklayer]]s to hold mortar<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/mortarboard Mortarboard]. dictionary.com</ref>) or [[Oxford]] cap, is an item of [[academic regalia|academic]] head dress consisting of a horizontal square board fixed upon a skull-cap, with a [[tassel]] attached to the center. In the UK and the US, it is commonly referred to informally in conjunction with an academic gown worn as a cap and gown. It is also often termed a '''square''', '''trencher''', or '''corner-cap''' in Australia. The adjective '''academical''' is also used.<ref>[http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/univ/so/pdfs/cso_4_ordinance02.171_217.pdf] University of Cambridge Ordinances, Chapter II</ref> In the US and UK, it is usually referred to more generically as a mortarboard, or (in the U.S.) simply '''cap'''.
[[Image:GSimpson.jpg|thumb|right|[[Georgiana Simpson]] in 1921, wearing a mortarboard and [[academic dress]] for her graduation from the [[University of Chicago]]]]


The '''square academic cap''', '''graduate cap''', '''cap''', '''mortarboard'''<ref>[http://www.bartleby.com/61/1/M0430100.html mortarboard.] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080828221859/http://www.bartleby.com/61/1/M0430100.html |date=2008-08-28 }} The [[American Heritage Dictionary]] of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000.</ref> (because of its similarity in appearance to the mortarboard used by brickmasons to hold mortar<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/mortarboard Mortarboard]. Entry at [[Dictionary.com]].</ref>) or '''Oxford cap'''<ref>{{cite web |title=Trencher cap |url=https://www.webster-dictionary.org/definition/Trencher%20cap |publisher=Webster's Dictionary |access-date=15 August 2022 |quote=the cap worn by studens at Oxford and Cambridge Universities, having a stiff, flat, square appendage at top. A similar cap used in the United States is called Oxford cap, mortar board, etc.}}</ref> is an item of [[academic dress]] consisting of a horizontal square board fixed upon a skull-cap, with a [[tassel]] attached to the centre. In the UK and the US, it is commonly referred to informally in conjunction with an [[academic gown]] as a "cap and gown". It is also sometimes termed a '''square''',<ref name=shaw3>{{cite book|last=Groves|first=Nicholas|title=Shaw's academical dress of Great Britain and Ireland.|date=2011|publisher=[[Burgon Society]]|isbn=9780956127235|edition=3rd}}</ref>{{rp|17}}<ref name="robinson">{{cite journal|first=N F|last=Robinson|title=The ''Pileus Quadratus'': An enquiry into the relation of the priest's square cap to the common academical catercap and to the judicial corner-cap|journal=Transactions of the St Paul's Ecclesiological Society|volume=5|year=1905|pages=1–16|url=https://archive.org/stream/transactionsofst05stpa#page/n57/mode/2up|access-date=14 May 2015}}</ref> '''trencher''',<ref name=shaw3/>{{rp|17}}<ref name=brewer>{{cite book|last=Brewer|first=E Cobham|title=Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable|date=1896|publisher=Harper & Brothers |url=https://archive.org/details/brewersdictionar000544mbp|access-date=14 May 2015}}</ref>{{rp|915}} or '''corner-cap'''.<ref name=robinson/> The adjective '''academical''' is also used.<ref>[http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/univ/so/pdfs/cso_4_ordinance02.171_217.pdf Chapter II]{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, [[University of Cambridge]] Ordinances.</ref>
The cap, together with the gown and (sometimes) a hood, now form the customary uniform of a [[university]] [[graduation|graduate]], in many parts of the world, following a British model.
[[Image:Andrea Mantegna 081.jpg|thumb|[[Andrea Mantegna]]: Ludovico Gonzaga, 1474.]]
== Origins ==
The mortarboard is generally believed by scholars to have developed from the [[biretta]], a similar-looking hat worn by [[Roman Catholic]] clergy. The biretta itself may have been a development of the [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] ''pileus quadratus'', a type of skullcap with superposed square and tump. A reinvention of this type of cap is known as the [[Bishop Andrewes cap]].<ref>Goff; p.22–23</ref> The Italian biretta is a word derived from ''berretto'', which is derived itself from the Latin ''birrus'' and the Greek ''pyrros'', both meaning "red." The cone-shaped red (seldom in black) biretta, related to the ancient Etruscan ''tutulus'' and the Roman ''pileus'', was used in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries to identify humanists, students, artists, and learned and blooming youth in general. The shape and the color conveyed meaning: Red was considered for a long time the royal power, whether because it was difficult to afford vestments of such solid and brilliant dye or because the high symbolic meaning of blood and life, thus the power over life and death.


The cap, together with the gown and sometimes a hood, now form the customary uniform of a [[university]] [[graduation|graduate]] in many parts of the world, following a [[United Kingdom|British]] model.
It is not casual that the ''capo'' (captain) headwear is found with such frequency in Renaissance paintings as the highly famous one by [[Piero della Francesca]] of [[Federico da Montefeltro]] with his red cap. Campano wrote about these hats in his ''Life of [[Niccolò Fortebraccio]]'', "he used to wear a red and high hat, the higher from the head the wider it became." Federico and Niccolò were [[Condottieri]]. The same cap is seen on [[Bartolomeo Colleoni]], commander of the Venetian Armies in 1454, on the Duke [[Ludovico II Gonzaga]] and on [[John Hawkwood]] in his equestrian monument by Paolo Uccello. This cap as worn by the leading Italian nobles at the end of the fifteenth century became a symbol of their military and civil powers over Italian cities at a time when the whole of Europe was going to be deeply transformed by Italian influences.
[[Image:Andrea Mantegna 081.jpg|thumb|[[Andrea Mantegna]]: [[Ludovico III Gonzaga]] (detail from the [[frescoes]] of the [[Camera degli Sposi]], 1465–74)]]


== Origins ==
It was originally reserved for holders of [[master degree]]s (the highest qualification in mediæval academia) but was later adopted by [[Bachelor's degree|bachelors]] and [[undergraduate]]s. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ''corner-cap'' ("catercap" in the [[Marprelate tracts]]) was the term used (''OED'').


The mortarboard may have developed from the [[biretta]], a similar-looking hat worn by [[Roman Catholic]] clergy. The biretta itself may have been a development of the [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] ''pileus quadratus'', a type of skullcap with superposed square and tump (meaning small mound). A reinvention of this type of cap is known as the [[Bishop Andrewes cap]].<ref name=goff>{{cite book|last=Goff|first=Philip|title=University of London Academic Dress|date=1999|publisher=University of London Press|location=London|isbn=0718716086}}</ref>{{rp|22–23}} The Italian ''biretta'' is a word derived from the [[Medieval Latin]] ''birretum'' from the [[Late Latin]] ''[[wikt:birrus|birrus]]'' "large hooded cloak", which is perhaps of [[Gaulish language|Gaulish]] origin, or from [[Ancient Greek]] πυρρός ''pyrrhos'' "flame-coloured, yellow".<ref>[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=biretta "biretta"]. ''[[Online Etymology Dictionary]]''.</ref>
Origins of the most commonly found mortarboard in the United States can be traced to a patent that was filed by an inventor Edward O'Reilly and Catholic priest, Joseph Durham who filed their patent in 1950. Their invention and subsequent patent was the result of his idea to incorporate a metal filling into the mortarboard thus making it more sturdy. Such mortarboards are very commonplace throughout the world today.<ref>US patent #2880423</ref>

== Variants ==
[[Image:Columbus-ohio-franklin-university-corner.jpg|left|thumb|[[Franklin University]] in [[Columbus, Ohio|Columbus]], Ohio features a giant steel mortarboard suspended over the street as a landmark.]]

[[Doctorate]] holders of some universities wear the mortarboard, although the round [[Tudor bonnet]] is more common in [[United Kingdom|Britain]]. The 4, 6, or 8 cornered "[[tam (cap)|tam]]" is gaining popularity in the US, and in general a soft square tam has some acceptance for women as a substitute for the hard 'square'.

In the US, the mortarboard is also worn by high school graduates during the presentation of their diplomas.


== Tassel ==
== Tassel ==
{{Unreferenced section|date=January 2010}}
{{Refimprove section|date=January 2010}}
[[Image:graduationtassel.jpg|thumb||right|'''Graduation tassel''' A three-color graduation tassel in burgundy, gold and white. The charm reveals it is from a 1987 ceremony. This particular tassel came from [[Piner High School]] in [[Santa Rosa, California|Santa Rosa]], California.]]
[[Image:graduationtassel.jpg|thumb|right|A three-colour graduation tassel in burgundy, gold and white. The charm reveals it is from a 1987 ceremony. This particular tassel came from [[Piner High School]] in [[Santa Rosa, California|Santa Rosa]], California.]]

In US graduation ceremonies, the side on which the tassel hangs can be important. Sometimes it is consistent among all students throughout the ceremony, in other cases it differs based on level of study with undergraduate students wearing the tassel on the right, and graduate student wearing them on the left. In some ceremonies, the student wears the tassel on one side until reception of the diploma, then it is switched to the other.


=== United Kingdom ===
At the high school level, the tassel is usually either the school's primary color or a mix of the school's colors with as many as three colors in a tassel. Sometimes a tassel of a distinctive color, such as gold, is worn by those graduating with Latin Honors (i.e. ''cum laude'') or on the "honor roll".


In the UK, the tassel is shorter and is gathered at the button at the centre of the board. The US style is slightly longer, gathered at a cord attached to the button.
Universities in the United States might use tassels in black or the school's colors, usually for higher degrees.


At the [[University of Cambridge]], undergraduates by ancient convention used to cut their tassels very short so that the tassel does not extend beyond the edge of the board. After they graduated, they wore the square cap with the tassel at the normal length.<ref>[[Fred Hoyle|Hoyle, Fred, Sir]]. ''Home Is Where the Wind Blows: Chapters from a Cosmologist's Life'', University Science books, 1994</ref> This convention has now fallen into disuse; few people now wear headgear with academic dress at any time and undergraduates in particular have no need to wear the cap.
For Bachelor degrees the tassel may be colored differently from the traditional black or school colors to represent the field (or one as closely related as possible) in which the wearer obtained his or her education. In 1896 most colleges and universities in the United States adopted a uniform code governing academic dress. The tassel may be adorned with a charm in the shape of the digits of the year.


=== United States ===
However, strictly speaking, the [[American Council on Education]] (ACE) code states that "The tassel should be black or the color appropriate to the subject," and only makes an exception for the gold tassel. The gold metallic tassel is reserved for those entitled to wear the [[doctorate|doctoral]] gown, as is the use of velvet for headwear. Only one tassel is worn at a time.
The [[American Council on Education]] (ACE) code states that "The tassel should be black or the colour appropriate to the subject," and makes an exception only for the gold tassel. The gold metallic tassel is reserved for those entitled to wear the [[doctorate|doctoral]] gown, as is the use of velvet for headwear. Only one tassel is worn at a time.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Academic Regalia|url=https://www.acenet.edu/Programs-Services/Pages/Academic-Regalia.aspx|access-date=2020-12-14|website=acenet.edu|language=en-US}}</ref>


<!-- Some of the links for the colour names are different than the colour names given by the ACE. This is because the links take the reader to the colour closest to that actually used by the ACE and academic hood manufacturers. So, when reading the article, one will see a close representation of the colour and the ACE name for the colour, and can click on the name to be taken to the article on the actual colour used. -->
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
! Faculty
! Faculty
! Color
! Colour
! Sample
! Sample
|-
|-
| [[Agriculture]]
| [[Agriculture]]
| [[Flax (color)|Maize]]
| [[Maize (color)|Maize]]
| style="background:#eedc82;"|
| style="background:#FBEC5D;"|
|-
|-
| [[Liberal arts|Arts]], [[literature|Letters]], [[Humanities]]
| [[Liberal arts|Arts]] (Liberal Arts), [[literature|Letters]] (Literature), [[Humanities]]
| [[White]]
| [[White]]
| style="background:white;"|
| style="background:white;"|
|-
|-
| [[Commerce]], [[Accountancy]], [[Business]]
| [[Commerce]], [[Accountancy]], [[Business]]
| [[Taupe#Pale taupe (mouse)|Drab]]<ref>The American Council on Education uses a brown/gray version of "Drab", not a green version or "Olive drab".</ref>
| [[Taupe#Pale taupe (mouse)|Drab]]<!-- The American Council on Education uses a brown/gray version of "Drab" not a green version, or "Olive drab". This is best represented on Wiki at the time of writing by "Taupe", specifically "Pale taupe" (or, "mouse"), and most closely matches the actual regalia colour produced in the US. -->
| style="background:#bc987e;"|
| style="background:#bc987e;"|
|-
|-
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|-
|-
| [[Education]]
| [[Education]]
| [[Sky blue|Light Blue]]
| [[Light blue (color)|Light Blue]]
| style="background:#6495ed;"|
| style="background:#66ccff;"|
|-
|-
| [[Engineering]]
| [[Fine Arts]], [[Architecture]]
| [[Orange (color)|Orange]]
| style="background:#ff7f00;"|
|-
| [[Fine art|Fine Arts]], [[Architecture]]
| [[Brown]]
| [[Brown]]
| style="background:#964b00;"|
| style="background:#654321;"|
|-
|-
| [[Forestry]], [[Environmental Studies]], [[Sustainable development|Sustainability]]
| [[Forestry]], [[Environmental studies|Environmental Studies]], [[Sustainability studies|Sustainability]]
| [[Russet (color)|Russet]]
| [[Auburn (color)|Russet]]
| style="background:#583d00;"|
| style="background:#932724;"|
|-
|-
| [[Journalism]]
| [[Journalism]]
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| style="background:purple;"|
| style="background:purple;"|
|-
|-
| [[Library Science]]
| [[Library science|Library Science]], [[Information Management]]
| [[Yellow (color)|Lemon]]
| [[Yellow (color)|Lemon]]
| style="background:#ff0;"|
| style="background:#ff0;"|
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| [[Medicine]]
| [[Medicine]]
| [[Kelly green|Green]]
| [[Kelly green|Green]]
| style="background:#00a550;"|<!-- While "Pharmacy", "Nursing", "Manual therapy", etc. are indeed part of the broader field of health care, they are here differentiated from "Medicine". A rule of thumb here is that any field that primarily requires the identification of an ailment and prescribes treatment is included in "Medicine", while the disciplines that provide that treatment (such as the aforementioned) may be logically covered under other fields of learning, represented by a different academic color. "Dentistry" identifies ailments and treatment but is assigned its own color, perhaps owing to its unique development from the barber profession. -->
| style="background:#00a550;"|<!-- While "Pharmacy", "Nursing", "Manual therapy", etc. are indeed included in the broader field of health care, they are here differentiated from "Medicine". A rule of thumb for these purposes is that any field that primarily requires the identification of an ailment and prescribes treatment is included in "Medicine", while the disciplines that provide that treatment (such as the aforementioned "Pharmacy", "Nursing", etc.) may be logically covered under other fields of learning, represented by a different academic colour. "Dentistry" identifies ailments and treatment but is assigned its own colour, perhaps owing to its unique development from the barber profession. -->
|-
|-
| [[Musicology|Music]]
| [[Musicology|Music]]
| [[Pink]]
| [[Pink]]
| style="background:#ffb6c1;"|
| style="background:#ffb6c1;"|
|-
| [[Natural Science]]
| [[Orange (color)|Orange]]
| style="background:#ff7f00;"|
|-
|-
| [[Nursing]]
| [[Nursing]]
| [[Golden (color)|Apricot]]
| [[Apricot (color)|Apricot]]
| style="background:#f0a900;"|
| style="background:#f0a900;"|
|-
|-
| Oratory, [[Public speaking|Speech]], [[Broadcasting]]<!-- This is beyond the field of television or radio journalism, which would be covered by "journalism", above - but broadcasting for any and all purposes -->
| [[Optometry]]
| [[Sea foam|Seafoam Green]]
| style="background:#6AAB8E;"|
|-
| [[Eloquence|Oratory]], [[Public speaking|Speech]]
| [[Silver (color)|Silver Gray]]
| [[Silver (color)|Silver Gray]]
| style="background:silver;"|
| style="background:silver;"|
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| style="background:darkblue;"|
| style="background:darkblue;"|
|-
|-
| [[Physical Education]], [[Manual Therapy]]
| [[Physical education|Physical Education]], [[Manual Therapy]], [[Physical Therapy]]
| Sage Green
| [[Sage (color)|Sage Green]]
| style="background:#6d8904;"|
| style="background:#6b8e23;"|
|-
|-
| [[Public Administration]], [[Public Policy]], [[Diplomatic service|Foreign Service]]
| [[Public administration|Public Administration]], [[Public policy|Public Policy]], [[Diplomacy|Foreign Service]]
| [[Teal (color)|Peacock Blue]]
| [[Teal (color)|Peacock Blue]]
| style="background:teal;"|
| style="background:teal;"|
|-
|-
| [[Public Health]]
| [[Public health|Public Health]]
| [[Salmon Pink]]
| [[Salmon (color)|Salmon Pink]]
| style="background:#ff91a4;"|
| style="background:salmon;"|
|-
|-
| [[Social science]]
| [[Science]] (both [[Social sciences|Social]] and [[Natural science|Natural]])
| [[Gold (color)|Golden Yellow]]
| [[Gold (color)|Golden Yellow]]
| style="background:#ffdf00;"|
| style="background:#ffdf00;"|
|-
|-
| [[Social Work]]
| [[Social work|Social Work]]
| [[Sandy brown|Citron]]
| [[Shades of brown#Sandy brown|Citron]]
| style="background:#f4a460;"|
| style="background:#f4a460;"|
|-
|-
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| style="background:#f00;"|
| style="background:#f00;"|
|-
|-
| [[Veterinary Science]]
| [[Veterinary medicine|Veterinary Science]]
| [[Gray]]
| [[Grey]]
| style="background:gray;"|
| style="background:gray;"|
|}
|}

Other countries may have different colours for different disciplines.


For schools where the graduation regalia is rented or borrowed by the student, the tassel might be a part of the rental or provided separately. Some schools that do not provide a tassel for graduates to keep may offer a souvenir tassel that is not worn with the regalia.
For schools where the graduation regalia is rented or borrowed by the student, the tassel might be a part of the rental or provided separately. Some schools that do not provide a tassel for graduates to keep may offer a souvenir tassel that is not worn with the regalia.

In the UK, the tassel is shorter and is gathered at the button at the center of the board. The U.S. style is slightly longer, gathered at a cord attached to the button.

At the University of Cambridge, undergraduates by ancient convention used to cut their tassels very short so that the tassel does not extend beyond the edge of the board. After they graduated, they wore the square cap with the tassel at the normal length.<ref>Hoyle, Sir Fred, Home is where the wind blows, University Science books, 1994</ref> This convention has now fallen into disuse; few people now wear headgear with academic dress at any time and undergraduates in particular have no need to wear the cap.


== Traditional wear ==
== Traditional wear ==
[[Image:Mortarboards.JPG|right|thumb|Two British mortarboards; left one is a folding-skull and the right one is a rigid-skull.]]
[[Image:Mortarboards.JPG|right|thumb|Two British mortarboards; left one is a folding-skull and the right one is a rigid-skull.]]
[[Image:Mourning cap.jpg|thumb|right|Top view of an academical mourning cap as used at Cambridge.]]
[[Image:Mourning cap.jpg|thumb|right|Top view of an academical mourning cap as used at Cambridge]]


As with other forms of headdress, academic caps are not generally worn indoors by men (other than by the Chancellor or other high officials), but are usually carried.{{dubious|date=May 2023}}{{cn|date=May 2023}}
As with other forms of headdress, academic caps are not generally worn indoors by men (other than by the Chancellor or other high officials), but are usually carried. In some graduation ceremonies caps have been dispensed with for men, being issued only to women, who do wear them indoors, or have been abandoned altogether. This has led to urban legends in a number of universities in the [[United Kingdom]] & [[Ireland]] which have as a common theme that idea that the wearing of the cap was abandoned in protest at the admission of women to the university. This story is told at the [[University of Cambridge]], [[Durham University]], the [[University of Bristol]], the [[University of St Andrews]], [[Queen's University, Belfast]], [[Trinity College, Dublin]] and [[University College, Dublin]] among others.


At the [[University of Oxford]], caps are mandatory dress for matriculation events and for all examinations. It is a commonly repeated myth at Oxford that the cap must be held and may not be worn at all except at the student's graduation; however, there is no rule in the university to this effect, and undergraduates wearing formal academic dress may either carry the cap or wear it. In particular, women undergraduates who exercise the right to wear a soft [[Canterbury cap]] must wear it on their head, rather than carrying it. Additionally, all undergraduates appearing before the Proctors' Court are required to present themselves wearing their caps, before removing them as proceedings start.
There are several types of mortarboard that are usually made. The most common in the UK is the 'folding skull' in which the skull part can be folded for ease of storing and carrying. Traditionally, the mortarboard had a 'rigid skull' which is considered more aesthetically pleasing and better fitting than a folding-skull one. The rigid skull one is easier to doff with as the skull would not collapse in on itself, unlike a folding skull which naturally might, thus avoiding it being awkward when it is placed back on the head. Both types require the wearer to wear the appropriate size to fit. In the US, an 'elasticated skull' is mostly used which eliminates the need to make many mortarboards in different hat sizes. Some mortarboards, especially those in east Asia are laced-up at the back of the skull cap.


In some graduation ceremonies caps have been dispensed with for men, being issued only to women, who do wear them indoors, or have been abandoned altogether. This has led to urban legends in universities in the [[United Kingdom]] and [[Ireland]] which have as a common theme the idea that the wearing of the cap was abandoned in protest at the admission of women to the university. In Ireland, a common belief<ref>{{cite web |title=Janine Dalton Blog |date=17 July 2005 |url=https://www.janinedalton.com/blog/archives/2005/hats-off/}}</ref> holds that only women wear the mortarboard because a bachelor's degree was thought to be the maximum education they could attain and thus represented the 'capping' of their education, however there is little evidence for this. Dr. David Fleming of the History Department at the [[University of Limerick]] called this reason 'complete nonsense and an urban myth', while the university's gown partner, Phelan Nolan said 'Women used to wear hats in Church and that is where the tradition has come from'.<ref>{{cite web |title=Are mortarboards really optional for graduating women? |date=February 9, 2017 |url=https://campus.ie/college-life/college-news/are-mortarboards-really-optional-for-graduating-women/}}</ref>
The correct way to wear a mortarboard is to have the larger part of the skull of the mortarboard at the back of the head with the top board parallel to the ground. A proper fitting mortarboard should not fall off easily.

There are several types of mortarboard. The most common in the UK is the 'folding skull' in which the skull part can be folded for ease of storing and carrying. Traditionally, the mortarboard had a 'rigid skull' which is considered more aesthetically pleasing and better fitting than a folding-skull one. In addition, the rigid skull type has the advantage of being easier to doff than the folding skull version, as there is no possibility of the skull collapsing in on itself. Many degree ceremonies in British universities include the ritual doffing of caps. Both types require the wearer to wear the appropriate size to fit. In the US, an 'elasticated skull' is mostly used, which eliminates the need to make many mortarboards in different hat sizes. Some mortarboards, especially those in east Asia are laced-up at the back of the skull cap.

The correct way to wear a mortarboard is to have the larger part of the skull of the mortarboard at the back of the head with the top board parallel to the ground. A properly fitting mortarboard should not fall off easily.


Until the second half of the twentieth century, mortarboards were often worn by schoolteachers, and the hat remains an icon of the teaching profession.
Until the second half of the twentieth century, mortarboards were often worn by schoolteachers, and the hat remains an icon of the teaching profession.
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=== Mourning cap ===
=== Mourning cap ===
There is a version of the mortarboard that is worn during mourning. Instead of a tassel and button on top of the board there are two wide black ribbons that are attached from corner to corner of the board forming a cross. At the centre where the two ribbons intersect a black ribbon rosette is attached. The ribbon for the wide ribbons is grosgrain ribbon whilst the rosette can be made of either the same grosgrain or satin. This mourning cap can be worn when mourning a personal friend or a family relative.

Another version has nine ribbon bows called "butterflies" attached to the back of the skull cap (three running vertically down the back seam, two vertically eitherside further towards the sides and one eitherside at the sides of the skull) in addition to the above. This cap is worn during the mourning of the monarch, a member of the royal family or the university chancellor.<ref>Hargreaves-Mawdsley, ''A History of Academical Dress in Europe Until the End of the Eighteenth Century'' (1963), p.137</ref>


A version of the mortarboard is worn during mourning. Instead of a tassel and button on top of the board, there are two black ribbons that are attached from corner to corner of the board forming a cross. At the centre where the two ribbons intersect a black ribbon rosette is attached. The ribbon for the wide ribbons is grosgrain ribbon whilst the rosette can be made of either the same grosgrain or satin. This mourning cap can be worn when mourning a personal friend or a family relative.
The mourning cap is worn with mourning bands (normal bands but with a pleat running down each band) and a mourning gown which is either a Cambridge DD undress gown with "pudding-sleeves" but in black stuff rather than silk as worn in the sixteenth-seventeenth centuries or a plain black stuff gown. Hoods are not worn, as they are considered festal items. However, Cambridge proctors in the past wore their MA hoods squared, so as to conceal the lining; since the lining was white it did not clash with the black and white colour scheme of mourning.


Another version has nine ribbon bows called "butterflies" attached to the back of the skull cap (three running vertically down the back seam, two vertically on either side further towards the sides and one on either side at the sides of the skull) in addition to the above. This cap is worn during the mourning of the monarch, a member of the royal family or the university chancellor.<ref>Hargreaves-Mawdsley, ''A History of Academical Dress in Europe Until the End of the Eighteenth Century'' (1963), p.137</ref>
=== Personalized doctoral cap ===
In some countries (e.g. Germany and Austria) it is tradition to prepare a personalized doctoral cap for the doctoral candidate and to hand it over in a ceremony short after the final exam (disputation). This tradition is prevalent among graduates in natural sciences (especially physics). The board of the cap is decorated with miniature objects reflecting the subject of the doctoral work. The preparation of the cap is usually carried out by candidate's colleagues and work group members.{{citation needed|date=September 2011}}


The mourning cap is worn with mourning bands (normal bands but with a pleat running down each band) and a mourning gown which is either a Cambridge DD undress gown with "pudding-sleeves" but in black stuff rather than silk as worn in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries or a plain black stuff gown. Hoods are not worn, as they are considered festal items. However, Cambridge proctors in the past wore their MA hoods squared, so as to conceal the lining; since the lining was white it did not clash with the black and white colour scheme of mourning.{{cn|date=December 2021}}
<gallery>
File:Personalized doctoral cap.jpg|Personalized doctoral cap.
</gallery>


== See also ==
== See also ==
Line 193: Line 177:


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{commons category|Graduation hats}}
*{{commons category-inline|Graduation hats}}
{{commons category|Mortar boards}}
*{{commons category-inline|Mortar boards}}

{{Academic dress}}
{{Hats}}


[[Category:Academic dress]]
[[Category:Academic dress]]
[[Category:Caps]]
[[Category:Caps]]
[[Category:Graduation]]
[[Category:Graduation]]
[[Category:Hats]]
[[Category:Headgear]]

[[ca:Birret]]
[[de:Doktorhut]]
[[es:Birrete]]
[[lv:Izlaiduma cepure]]
[[pt:Capelo (chapéu)]]
[[ru:Квадратная академическая шапочка]]
[[scn:Bascu accadèmicu quatratu]]
[[sv:Oxfordmössa]]
[[zh-yue:四方帽]]
[[zh:四方帽]]

Latest revision as of 15:57, 9 March 2024

Graduation portrait of Linus Pauling wearing a mortarboard, 1922
Georgiana Simpson in 1921, wearing a mortarboard and academic dress for her graduation from the University of Chicago

The square academic cap, graduate cap, cap, mortarboard[1] (because of its similarity in appearance to the mortarboard used by brickmasons to hold mortar[2]) or Oxford cap[3] is an item of academic dress consisting of a horizontal square board fixed upon a skull-cap, with a tassel attached to the centre. In the UK and the US, it is commonly referred to informally in conjunction with an academic gown as a "cap and gown". It is also sometimes termed a square,[4]: 17 [5] trencher,[4]: 17 [6]: 915  or corner-cap.[5] The adjective academical is also used.[7]

The cap, together with the gown and sometimes a hood, now form the customary uniform of a university graduate in many parts of the world, following a British model.

Andrea Mantegna: Ludovico III Gonzaga (detail from the frescoes of the Camera degli Sposi, 1465–74)

Origins[edit]

The mortarboard may have developed from the biretta, a similar-looking hat worn by Roman Catholic clergy. The biretta itself may have been a development of the Roman pileus quadratus, a type of skullcap with superposed square and tump (meaning small mound). A reinvention of this type of cap is known as the Bishop Andrewes cap.[8]: 22–23  The Italian biretta is a word derived from the Medieval Latin birretum from the Late Latin birrus "large hooded cloak", which is perhaps of Gaulish origin, or from Ancient Greek πυρρός pyrrhos "flame-coloured, yellow".[9]

Tassel[edit]

A three-colour graduation tassel in burgundy, gold and white. The charm reveals it is from a 1987 ceremony. This particular tassel came from Piner High School in Santa Rosa, California.

United Kingdom[edit]

In the UK, the tassel is shorter and is gathered at the button at the centre of the board. The US style is slightly longer, gathered at a cord attached to the button.

At the University of Cambridge, undergraduates by ancient convention used to cut their tassels very short so that the tassel does not extend beyond the edge of the board. After they graduated, they wore the square cap with the tassel at the normal length.[10] This convention has now fallen into disuse; few people now wear headgear with academic dress at any time and undergraduates in particular have no need to wear the cap.

United States[edit]

The American Council on Education (ACE) code states that "The tassel should be black or the colour appropriate to the subject," and makes an exception only for the gold tassel. The gold metallic tassel is reserved for those entitled to wear the doctoral gown, as is the use of velvet for headwear. Only one tassel is worn at a time.[11]

Faculty Colour Sample
Agriculture Maize
Arts (Liberal Arts), Letters (Literature), Humanities White
Commerce, Accountancy, Business Drab
Dentistry Lilac
Economics Copper
Education Light Blue
Engineering Orange
Fine Arts, Architecture Brown
Forestry, Environmental Studies, Sustainability Russet
Journalism Crimson
Law Purple
Library Science, Information Management Lemon
Medicine Green
Music Pink
Nursing Apricot
Oratory, Speech, Broadcasting Silver Gray
Pharmacy Olive Green
Philosophy Dark Blue
Physical Education, Manual Therapy, Physical Therapy Sage Green
Public Administration, Public Policy, Foreign Service Peacock Blue
Public Health Salmon Pink
Science (both Social and Natural) Golden Yellow
Social Work Citron
Theology, Divinity Scarlet
Veterinary Science Grey

Other countries may have different colours for different disciplines.

For schools where the graduation regalia is rented or borrowed by the student, the tassel might be a part of the rental or provided separately. Some schools that do not provide a tassel for graduates to keep may offer a souvenir tassel that is not worn with the regalia.

Traditional wear[edit]

Two British mortarboards; left one is a folding-skull and the right one is a rigid-skull.
Top view of an academical mourning cap as used at Cambridge

As with other forms of headdress, academic caps are not generally worn indoors by men (other than by the Chancellor or other high officials), but are usually carried.[dubious ][citation needed]

At the University of Oxford, caps are mandatory dress for matriculation events and for all examinations. It is a commonly repeated myth at Oxford that the cap must be held and may not be worn at all except at the student's graduation; however, there is no rule in the university to this effect, and undergraduates wearing formal academic dress may either carry the cap or wear it. In particular, women undergraduates who exercise the right to wear a soft Canterbury cap must wear it on their head, rather than carrying it. Additionally, all undergraduates appearing before the Proctors' Court are required to present themselves wearing their caps, before removing them as proceedings start.

In some graduation ceremonies caps have been dispensed with for men, being issued only to women, who do wear them indoors, or have been abandoned altogether. This has led to urban legends in universities in the United Kingdom and Ireland which have as a common theme the idea that the wearing of the cap was abandoned in protest at the admission of women to the university. In Ireland, a common belief[12] holds that only women wear the mortarboard because a bachelor's degree was thought to be the maximum education they could attain and thus represented the 'capping' of their education, however there is little evidence for this. Dr. David Fleming of the History Department at the University of Limerick called this reason 'complete nonsense and an urban myth', while the university's gown partner, Phelan Nolan said 'Women used to wear hats in Church and that is where the tradition has come from'.[13]

There are several types of mortarboard. The most common in the UK is the 'folding skull' in which the skull part can be folded for ease of storing and carrying. Traditionally, the mortarboard had a 'rigid skull' which is considered more aesthetically pleasing and better fitting than a folding-skull one. In addition, the rigid skull type has the advantage of being easier to doff than the folding skull version, as there is no possibility of the skull collapsing in on itself. Many degree ceremonies in British universities include the ritual doffing of caps. Both types require the wearer to wear the appropriate size to fit. In the US, an 'elasticated skull' is mostly used, which eliminates the need to make many mortarboards in different hat sizes. Some mortarboards, especially those in east Asia are laced-up at the back of the skull cap.

The correct way to wear a mortarboard is to have the larger part of the skull of the mortarboard at the back of the head with the top board parallel to the ground. A properly fitting mortarboard should not fall off easily.

Until the second half of the twentieth century, mortarboards were often worn by schoolteachers, and the hat remains an icon of the teaching profession.

Mortarboards are often seen in party supply shops in the United States in May and June, when they appear in the form of party decorations, on commemorative gifts such as teddy bears, and on congratulatory greeting cards.

Mourning cap[edit]

A version of the mortarboard is worn during mourning. Instead of a tassel and button on top of the board, there are two black ribbons that are attached from corner to corner of the board forming a cross. At the centre where the two ribbons intersect a black ribbon rosette is attached. The ribbon for the wide ribbons is grosgrain ribbon whilst the rosette can be made of either the same grosgrain or satin. This mourning cap can be worn when mourning a personal friend or a family relative.

Another version has nine ribbon bows called "butterflies" attached to the back of the skull cap (three running vertically down the back seam, two vertically on either side further towards the sides and one on either side at the sides of the skull) in addition to the above. This cap is worn during the mourning of the monarch, a member of the royal family or the university chancellor.[14]

The mourning cap is worn with mourning bands (normal bands but with a pleat running down each band) and a mourning gown which is either a Cambridge DD undress gown with "pudding-sleeves" but in black stuff rather than silk as worn in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries or a plain black stuff gown. Hoods are not worn, as they are considered festal items. However, Cambridge proctors in the past wore their MA hoods squared, so as to conceal the lining; since the lining was white it did not clash with the black and white colour scheme of mourning.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ mortarboard. Archived 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Machine The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000.
  2. ^ Mortarboard. Entry at Dictionary.com.
  3. ^ "Trencher cap". Webster's Dictionary. Retrieved 15 August 2022. the cap worn by studens at Oxford and Cambridge Universities, having a stiff, flat, square appendage at top. A similar cap used in the United States is called Oxford cap, mortar board, etc.
  4. ^ a b Groves, Nicholas (2011). Shaw's academical dress of Great Britain and Ireland (3rd ed.). Burgon Society. ISBN 9780956127235.
  5. ^ a b Robinson, N F (1905). "The Pileus Quadratus: An enquiry into the relation of the priest's square cap to the common academical catercap and to the judicial corner-cap". Transactions of the St Paul's Ecclesiological Society. 5: 1–16. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  6. ^ Brewer, E Cobham (1896). Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. Harper & Brothers. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  7. ^ Chapter II[permanent dead link], University of Cambridge Ordinances.
  8. ^ Goff, Philip (1999). University of London Academic Dress. London: University of London Press. ISBN 0718716086.
  9. ^ "biretta". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  10. ^ Hoyle, Fred, Sir. Home Is Where the Wind Blows: Chapters from a Cosmologist's Life, University Science books, 1994
  11. ^ "Academic Regalia". acenet.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-14.
  12. ^ "Janine Dalton Blog". 17 July 2005.
  13. ^ "Are mortarboards really optional for graduating women?". February 9, 2017.
  14. ^ Hargreaves-Mawdsley, A History of Academical Dress in Europe Until the End of the Eighteenth Century (1963), p.137

References[edit]

  • Goff, Philip (1999). University of London Academic Dress. London: University of London Press.

External links[edit]