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Breeching (boys)

Breeching was the occasion when a small boy was first dressed in breeches or trousers. From the mid-16th century[1] until the late 19th or early 20th century, young boys in the Western world were unbreeched and wore gowns or dresses until an age that varied between two and eight.[2] Various forms of relatively subtle differences usually enabled others to tell little boys from little girls, in codes that modern art historians are able to understand but may be difficult for the layperson to discern.

Flemish boy of 1625 in a dress with sewn in tucks to both layers of the skirt to allow for growth. The hair and hat are distinctively masculine, and he wears a sword or dagger (observer's left) and red coral beads, which were used for teething.
Boston, 1755–1760, boy and (probably) girl

Breeching was an important rite of passage in the life of a boy, looked forward to with much excitement, and often celebrated with a small party. It often marked the point at which the father became more involved with the raising of a boy.[3]

Reasons Edit

The main reason for keeping boys in dresses was toilet training, or the lack thereof.[citation needed] The change was probably made once boys had reached the age when they could easily undo the rather complicated fastenings of many early modern breeches and trousers. Before roughly 1550 various styles of long robes were in any case commonly worn by adult males of various sorts, so boys wearing them could probably not be said to form a distinct phenomenon. Dresses were also easier to make with room for future growth, in an age when clothes were much more expensive than now for all classes. The age of reason was generally considered to be about seven, and breeching corresponded roughly with that age for much of the period. The many portraits of Balthasar Charles, Prince of Asturias (1629–1646), son of Philip IV of Spain, show him wearing breeches from about the age of six.

For working-class children, about whom even less is known than their better-off contemporaries, it may well have marked the start of a working life. The debate between his parents over the breeching of the hero of Tristram Shandy (1761) suggests that the timing of the event could be rather arbitrary; in this case it is his father who suggests the time has arrived.[4] The 17th-century French cleric and memoirist François-Timoléon de Choisy is supposed to have been kept in dresses until he was eighteen.

Celebrations Edit

In the 19th century, photographs were often taken of the boy in his new trousers, typically with his father. He might also collect small gifts of money by going round the neighbourhood showing off his new clothes. Friends, of the mother as much as the boy, might gather to see his first appearance. A letter of 1679 from Lady Anne North to her widowed and absent son gives a lengthy account of the breeching of her grandson: "Never had any bride that was to be dressed upon her wedding-night more hands about her, some the legs and some the armes, the taylor buttn'ing and other putting on the sword, and so many lookers on that had I not a ffinger [sic] amongst them I could not have seen him. When he was quit drest he acted his part as well as any of them. ... since you could not have the first sight I resolved you should have a full relation". The dresses he wore before she calls "coats".[5]

Unbreeched boys Edit

 
Louis XIV and his unbreeched brother. In French royal portraits gender can be hard to tell, except by the absence of jewellery (1640s)
 
English boys (1670)

The first progression, for both boys and girls, was when they were shortcoated or taken out of the long dresses that came well below the feet that were worn by babies—and which have survived as the modern christening robe. It was not possible to walk in these, which no doubt dictated the timing of the change. Toddlers' gowns often featured leading strings, which were narrow straps of fabric or ribbon attached at the shoulder and held by an adult while the child was learning to walk.[6][7]

After this stage, in the Early Modern period it is usually not too difficult to distinguish between small boys and girls in commissioned portraits of the wealthy, even where the precise identities are no longer known. The smaller figures of small children in genre painting have less detail, and painters often did not trouble to include distinguishing props as they did in portraits. Working-class children presumably were more likely than the rich to wear handed-down clothes that were used by both sexes. In portraits the colours of clothes often keep the rough gender distinctions we see in adults—girls wear white or pale colours, and boys darker ones, including red. This may not entirely reflect reality, but the differences in hairstyles, and in the style of clothing at the chest, throat and neck, waist, and often the cuffs, presumably do.

In the 19th century, perhaps as childhood became sentimentalised, it becomes harder to tell the clothing apart between the sexes; the hair remains the best guide, but some mothers were evidently unable to resist keeping this long too. By this time the age of breeching was falling closer to two or three, where it would remain. Boys in most periods had shorter hair, often cut in a straight fringe, whilst girls' hair was longer, and in earlier periods sometimes worn "up" in adult styles, at least for special occasions like portraits. In the 19th century, wearing hair up itself became a significant rite of passage for girls at puberty, as part of their "coming out" into society. Younger girls' hair was always long, or plaited. Sometimes a quiff or large curl emerges from under a boy's cap. Boys are most likely to have side partings, and girls centre partings.

Girls' bodices usually reflected adult styles, in their best clothes at least, and low bodices and necklaces are common.[8] Boys often, though not always, had dresses that were closed up to the neck-line, and often buttoned at the front—rare for girls. They frequently wear belts, and in periods when female dresses had a V at the waist, this is often seen on little girls, but not on boys. Linen and lace at the neck and cuffs tend to follow adult styles for each gender, although again the clothes worn in portraits no doubt do not reflect everyday wear, and may not reflect even best clothes accurately.

Unbreeched boys of the nobility are sometimes seen wearing swords or daggers on a belt. A speech by King Leontes from Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale implies that, as common sense would suggest, these could not be drawn, and were purely for show:

Looking on the lines
Of my boy's face, methought I did recoil
Twenty-three years, and saw myself unbreech'd
In my green velvet coat, my dagger muzzled,
Lest it should bite its master, and so prove
(As ornament oft does) too dangerous.[9]

— he also calls his dress a "coat"; "cote" was a French and English term, dating back to the Middle Ages, for earlier adult male gowns and seems to have been kept in use for boys' clothes to preserve some gender distinction.

Usually jewellery is not worn by boys, but when worn it is likely to be dark in colour, like the coral beads worn by the Flemish boy above. Coral was considered by medical authorities the best material to use for teething aids, and a combined rattle and whistle (in silver) and teething stick (in coral) can be seen in many portraits.[10]

 
The children of King Charles I of England in 1637 by Van Dyck. From left: Mary, James—unbreeched at four, Charles, Elizabeth and Anne.

In portraits even very young girls may wear necklaces, often of pearls. In the Van Dyck portrait of the children of Charles I, only the absence of a necklace and the colour of his dress distinguish the unbreeched James (aged four) from his next youngest sister Elizabeth, whilst their elder brother and sister, at seven and six, have moved on to adult styles. In cases of possible doubt, painters tend to give boys masculine toys to hold like drums, whips for toy horses, or bows.

The next step Edit

In the late 18th century, new philosophies of child-rearing led to clothes that were thought especially suitable for children. Toddlers wore washable dresses called frocks of linen or cotton.[11] British and American boys after perhaps three began to wear rather short pantaloons and short jackets, and for very young boys the skeleton suit was introduced.[11] These gave the first real alternative to dresses, and became fashionable across Europe.

 
Boy in a light frock, with masculine hat (on ground) and drum, England, late 18th century
 
English-inspired pantaloon suit. Germany, late 18th century

The skeleton suit consisted of trousers and tight-fitting jacket, buttoned together at the waist or higher up; they were not unlike the romper suit introduced in the early 20th century.[12] But dresses for boys did not disappear, and again became common from the 1820s, when they were worn at about knee-length, sometimes with visible pantaloons called pantalettes as underwear, a style also worn by little girls.

As the next stage, from the mid-19th century boys usually progressed into shorts at breeching—again these are more accommodating to growth, and cheaper. The knickerbocker suit was also popular. The jackets of boys after breeching lacked adult tails, and this may have influenced the adult tail-less styles which developed, initially for casual wear of various sorts, like the smoking-jacket and sports jacket. After the First World War the wearing of boy's dresses seems finally to have died out, except for babies.

In England and some other countries, many school uniforms still mandate shorts for boys until about nine or ten.

Gallery Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Melanie Scheussler suggests a date of post-1540 for England, France, and the Low Countries; see Scheussler, "'She Hath Over Grown All that She Ever Hath': Children's Clothing in the Lisle Letters, 1533–40", in Netherton, Robin, and Gale R. Owen-Crocker, editors, Medieval Clothing and Textiles, Volume 3, p. 185.
  2. ^ Baumgarten, Linda: What Clothes Reveal: The Language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America, p. 166
  3. ^ Baumgarten, p. 168
  4. ^ The episode takes up Chapters 48–53 of Book 3 (though it is neither as long nor as conclusive as that might suggest), which was published in 1761 Gutenberg project text (large file)
  5. ^ Quoted in Susan Vincent (2003), Dressing the Elite: Clothes in Early Modern England, p. 59; Berg Publishers; ISBN 1-85973-751-X
  6. ^ Ashelford, Jane: The Art of Dress: Clothing and Society 1500–1914
  7. ^ Baumgarten, p. 166
  8. ^ When front-closing gowns with stomachers became fashionable for women at the end of the 17th century, young girls continued to wear back-closing bodices, which from this time began to be cut and trimmed more simply than adult women's gowns; see Ashelford, Jane: The Art of Dress: Clothing and Society 1500–1914
  9. ^ (I.ii.153–58)
  10. ^ Here, the two children from Boston at top, and the Boucher of Philipe Egalité in the Gallery. Virtually identical ones can be seen from a century or more earlier. Examples from the Metropolitan
  11. ^ a b Baumgarten, p. 171
  12. ^ Payne, Blanche; Winakor, Geitel; Farrell-Beck Jane: The History of Costume, from the Ancient Mesopotamia to the Twentieth Century, 2nd Edn, pp. 424–25, HarperCollins, 1992. ISBN 0-06-047141-7

References Edit

  • Ashelford, Jane: The Art of Dress: Clothing and Society 1500–1914, Abrams, 1996. ISBN 0-8109-6317-5
  • Baumgarten, Linda: What Clothes Reveal: The Language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America, Yale University Press,2002. ISBN 0-300-09580-5
  • Netherton, Robin, and Gale R. Owen-Crocker, editors, Medieval Clothing and Textiles, Volume 3, Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK, and Rochester, NY, the Boydell Press 2007, ISBN 978-1-84383-291-1
  • Payne, Blanche; Winakor, Geitel; Farrell-Beck Jane: The History of Costume, from Ancient Mesopotamia to the Twentieth Century, 2nd Edn, pp. 424–25, HarperCollins, 1992. ISBN 0-06-047141-7

External links Edit

  Media related to Boys' dresses at Wikimedia Commons

  • "Boys Dress" from the Museum of Childhood, London. (accessed Sept 17, 2007)
  • , Santa Fe. (accessed Sept 17, 2007)


breeching, boys, breeching, occasion, when, small, first, dressed, breeches, trousers, from, 16th, century, until, late, 19th, early, 20th, century, young, boys, western, world, were, unbreeched, wore, gowns, dresses, until, that, varied, between, eight, vario. Breeching was the occasion when a small boy was first dressed in breeches or trousers From the mid 16th century 1 until the late 19th or early 20th century young boys in the Western world were unbreeched and wore gowns or dresses until an age that varied between two and eight 2 Various forms of relatively subtle differences usually enabled others to tell little boys from little girls in codes that modern art historians are able to understand but may be difficult for the layperson to discern Flemish boy of 1625 in a dress with sewn in tucks to both layers of the skirt to allow for growth The hair and hat are distinctively masculine and he wears a sword or dagger observer s left and red coral beads which were used for teething Boston 1755 1760 boy and probably girlBreeching was an important rite of passage in the life of a boy looked forward to with much excitement and often celebrated with a small party It often marked the point at which the father became more involved with the raising of a boy 3 Contents 1 Reasons 2 Celebrations 3 Unbreeched boys 4 The next step 5 Gallery 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksReasons EditThe main reason for keeping boys in dresses was toilet training or the lack thereof citation needed The change was probably made once boys had reached the age when they could easily undo the rather complicated fastenings of many early modern breeches and trousers Before roughly 1550 various styles of long robes were in any case commonly worn by adult males of various sorts so boys wearing them could probably not be said to form a distinct phenomenon Dresses were also easier to make with room for future growth in an age when clothes were much more expensive than now for all classes The age of reason was generally considered to be about seven and breeching corresponded roughly with that age for much of the period The many portraits of Balthasar Charles Prince of Asturias 1629 1646 son of Philip IV of Spain show him wearing breeches from about the age of six For working class children about whom even less is known than their better off contemporaries it may well have marked the start of a working life The debate between his parents over the breeching of the hero of Tristram Shandy 1761 suggests that the timing of the event could be rather arbitrary in this case it is his father who suggests the time has arrived 4 The 17th century French cleric and memoirist Francois Timoleon de Choisy is supposed to have been kept in dresses until he was eighteen Celebrations EditIn the 19th century photographs were often taken of the boy in his new trousers typically with his father He might also collect small gifts of money by going round the neighbourhood showing off his new clothes Friends of the mother as much as the boy might gather to see his first appearance A letter of 1679 from Lady Anne North to her widowed and absent son gives a lengthy account of the breeching of her grandson Never had any bride that was to be dressed upon her wedding night more hands about her some the legs and some the armes the taylor buttn ing and other putting on the sword and so many lookers on that had I not a ffinger sic amongst them I could not have seen him When he was quit drest he acted his part as well as any of them since you could not have the first sight I resolved you should have a full relation The dresses he wore before she calls coats 5 Unbreeched boys Edit nbsp Louis XIV and his unbreeched brother In French royal portraits gender can be hard to tell except by the absence of jewellery 1640s nbsp English boys 1670 The first progression for both boys and girls was when they were shortcoated or taken out of the long dresses that came well below the feet that were worn by babies and which have survived as the modern christening robe It was not possible to walk in these which no doubt dictated the timing of the change Toddlers gowns often featured leading strings which were narrow straps of fabric or ribbon attached at the shoulder and held by an adult while the child was learning to walk 6 7 After this stage in the Early Modern period it is usually not too difficult to distinguish between small boys and girls in commissioned portraits of the wealthy even where the precise identities are no longer known The smaller figures of small children in genre painting have less detail and painters often did not trouble to include distinguishing props as they did in portraits Working class children presumably were more likely than the rich to wear handed down clothes that were used by both sexes In portraits the colours of clothes often keep the rough gender distinctions we see in adults girls wear white or pale colours and boys darker ones including red This may not entirely reflect reality but the differences in hairstyles and in the style of clothing at the chest throat and neck waist and often the cuffs presumably do In the 19th century perhaps as childhood became sentimentalised it becomes harder to tell the clothing apart between the sexes the hair remains the best guide but some mothers were evidently unable to resist keeping this long too By this time the age of breeching was falling closer to two or three where it would remain Boys in most periods had shorter hair often cut in a straight fringe whilst girls hair was longer and in earlier periods sometimes worn up in adult styles at least for special occasions like portraits In the 19th century wearing hair up itself became a significant rite of passage for girls at puberty as part of their coming out into society Younger girls hair was always long or plaited Sometimes a quiff or large curl emerges from under a boy s cap Boys are most likely to have side partings and girls centre partings Girls bodices usually reflected adult styles in their best clothes at least and low bodices and necklaces are common 8 Boys often though not always had dresses that were closed up to the neck line and often buttoned at the front rare for girls They frequently wear belts and in periods when female dresses had a V at the waist this is often seen on little girls but not on boys Linen and lace at the neck and cuffs tend to follow adult styles for each gender although again the clothes worn in portraits no doubt do not reflect everyday wear and may not reflect even best clothes accurately Unbreeched boys of the nobility are sometimes seen wearing swords or daggers on a belt A speech by King Leontes from Shakespeare s The Winter s Tale implies that as common sense would suggest these could not be drawn and were purely for show Looking on the lines Of my boy s face methought I did recoil Twenty three years and saw myself unbreech d In my green velvet coat my dagger muzzled Lest it should bite its master and so prove As ornament oft does too dangerous 9 he also calls his dress a coat cote was a French and English term dating back to the Middle Ages for earlier adult male gowns and seems to have been kept in use for boys clothes to preserve some gender distinction Usually jewellery is not worn by boys but when worn it is likely to be dark in colour like the coral beads worn by the Flemish boy above Coral was considered by medical authorities the best material to use for teething aids and a combined rattle and whistle in silver and teething stick in coral can be seen in many portraits 10 nbsp The children of King Charles I of England in 1637 by Van Dyck From left Mary James unbreeched at four Charles Elizabeth and Anne In portraits even very young girls may wear necklaces often of pearls In the Van Dyck portrait of the children of Charles I only the absence of a necklace and the colour of his dress distinguish the unbreeched James aged four from his next youngest sister Elizabeth whilst their elder brother and sister at seven and six have moved on to adult styles In cases of possible doubt painters tend to give boys masculine toys to hold like drums whips for toy horses or bows The next step EditIn the late 18th century new philosophies of child rearing led to clothes that were thought especially suitable for children Toddlers wore washable dresses called frocks of linen or cotton 11 British and American boys after perhaps three began to wear rather short pantaloons and short jackets and for very young boys the skeleton suit was introduced 11 These gave the first real alternative to dresses and became fashionable across Europe nbsp Boy in a light frock with masculine hat on ground and drum England late 18th century nbsp English inspired pantaloon suit Germany late 18th centuryThe skeleton suit consisted of trousers and tight fitting jacket buttoned together at the waist or higher up they were not unlike the romper suit introduced in the early 20th century 12 But dresses for boys did not disappear and again became common from the 1820s when they were worn at about knee length sometimes with visible pantaloons called pantalettes as underwear a style also worn by little girls As the next stage from the mid 19th century boys usually progressed into shorts at breeching again these are more accommodating to growth and cheaper The knickerbocker suit was also popular The jackets of boys after breeching lacked adult tails and this may have influenced the adult tail less styles which developed initially for casual wear of various sorts like the smoking jacket and sports jacket After the First World War the wearing of boy s dresses seems finally to have died out except for babies In England and some other countries many school uniforms still mandate shorts for boys until about nine or ten Gallery Edit nbsp Pieter Bruegel the Elder 1568 Boy from The Peasant Wedding the hat gives the gender nbsp Nicholas Hilliard Elizabeth Stuart Electress Palatine and her son Frederick Henry with leading strings 1615 nbsp Prince Ulrik of Denmark 1615 The hair and active dog show the gender nbsp Anthony van Dyck Lomellini family Genoa 1623 nbsp The Lucy family English c 1625 Two boys at the front plus one with his mother holding a bow as tall as himself The baby with the nurse may be a boy nbsp Velazquez The eldest son of Philip IV of Spain has a sword Marshall s baton and armour gorget nbsp Charles II of England before he was shortcoated holding a teething coral 1630 nbsp Louis XV in 1712 nbsp Frederick Crown Prince of Prussia later Frederick the Great with his sister Wilhelmine as children c 1715 Painting by Antoine Pesne nbsp Francois Boucher 1750 Philippe Egalite then Duke of Montpensier aged three with toys prophetically including playing cards nbsp German boy mid 18th century with gun hat and dog nbsp German boy aged three 1769 nbsp Thomas Gainsborough The Blue Boy c 1770 reviving the style of Van Dyck s period as semi fancy dress nbsp Goya 1784 A skeleton suit or similar outfit nbsp Prince Octavius of Great Britain last son of George III aged 4 in 1783 the year he died Benjamin West nbsp Neoclassical boy Edgar Clarke in 1802 by Francois Xavier Fabre nbsp Rembrandt Peale 1812 American boy wearing special boy s suit nbsp English watercolour 1836 Boy in short dress with visible pantalettes as underwear nbsp Corot 1843 44 When there was doubt painters tended to use aggressively masculine props to confirm gender like this whip nbsp Afonso Prince Imperial of Brazil eldest son of Pedro II of Brazil holding a stick and hoop 1846 nbsp English breeching portrait with knickerbocker suit c 1867 nbsp English boy 1871 Without his name on the back the sex would be hard to determine nbsp Sailor style dress on boy late 19th century Evidently sufficiently common that the photography studio has a mast prop ready nbsp Nicholas II with his mother in 1870 nbsp Thomas Meighan later a movie star in the 1880s nbsp Franklin D Roosevelt in 1884 at the age of 2 nbsp American boy 1902 One year old Melville Bell Grosvenor is held by his parents Elsie May Bell and Gilbert H GrosvenorNotes Edit Melanie Scheussler suggests a date of post 1540 for England France and the Low Countries see Scheussler She Hath Over Grown All that She Ever Hath Children s Clothing in the Lisle Letters 1533 40 in Netherton Robin and Gale R Owen Crocker editors Medieval Clothing and Textiles Volume 3 p 185 Baumgarten Linda What Clothes Reveal The Language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America p 166 Baumgarten p 168 The episode takes up Chapters 48 53 of Book 3 though it is neither as long nor as conclusive as that might suggest which was published in 1761 Gutenberg project text large file Quoted in Susan Vincent 2003 Dressing the Elite Clothes in Early Modern England p 59 Berg Publishers ISBN 1 85973 751 X Ashelford Jane The Art of Dress Clothing and Society 1500 1914 Baumgarten p 166 When front closing gowns with stomachers became fashionable for women at the end of the 17th century young girls continued to wear back closing bodices which from this time began to be cut and trimmed more simply than adult women s gowns see Ashelford Jane The Art of Dress Clothing and Society 1500 1914 I ii 153 58 Here the two children from Boston at top and the Boucher of Philipe Egalite in the Gallery Virtually identical ones can be seen from a century or more earlier Examples from the Metropolitan a b Baumgarten p 171 Payne Blanche Winakor Geitel Farrell Beck Jane The History of Costume from the Ancient Mesopotamia to the Twentieth Century 2nd Edn pp 424 25 HarperCollins 1992 ISBN 0 06 047141 7References EditAshelford Jane The Art of Dress Clothing and Society 1500 1914 Abrams 1996 ISBN 0 8109 6317 5 Baumgarten Linda What Clothes Reveal The Language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America Yale University Press 2002 ISBN 0 300 09580 5 Netherton Robin and Gale R Owen Crocker editors Medieval Clothing and Textiles Volume 3 Woodbridge Suffolk UK and Rochester NY the Boydell Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 84383 291 1 Payne Blanche Winakor Geitel Farrell Beck Jane The History of Costume from Ancient Mesopotamia to the Twentieth Century 2nd Edn pp 424 25 HarperCollins 1992 ISBN 0 06 047141 7External links Edit nbsp Media related to Boys dresses at Wikimedia Commons Boys Dress from the Museum of Childhood London accessed Sept 17 2007 MOIFA Santa Fe accessed Sept 17 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Breeching boys amp oldid 1171404311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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