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Gorget

A gorget /ˈɡɔːrɪt/, from the French gorge meaning throat, was a band of linen wrapped around a woman's neck and head in the medieval period or the lower part of a simple chaperon hood.[2][3] The term later described a steel or leather collar to protect the throat, a set of pieces of plate armour, or a single piece of plate armour hanging from the neck and covering the throat and chest. Later, particularly from the 18th century, the gorget became primarily ornamental, serving as a symbolic accessory on military uniforms, a use which has survived in some armies.

The gorget in this 1772 portrait of Colonel George Washington by Charles Willson Peale, was worn in the French and Indian War to show his rank as an officer in the Virginia Regiment.[1]
Elaborately decorated gilt-brass gorget of c. 1630, probably Dutch

The term may also be used for other things such as items of jewellery worn around the throat region in several societies, for example wide thin gold collars found in prehistoric Ireland dating to the Bronze Age.[4]

As part of armour

 
Gorget in a full suit of armour

In the High Middle Ages, when mail was the primary form of metal body armour used in Western Europe, the mail coif protected the neck and lower face. As more plate armour appeared to supplement mail during the 14th century, the bascinet helmet incorporated a mail curtain called the aventail which protected the lower face, neck and shoulders. A separate mail collar called a "pisan" or "standard" was sometimes worn under the aventail as additional protection.[5] Towards the end of the 14th century, threats including the increased penetrating power of the lance when paired with a lance rest on the breastplate made more rigid forms of neck protection desirable. One solution was a standing collar plate separate from the helmet that could be worn over the aventail, with enough space between the collar and helmet that a man-at-arms could turn his head inside it. In the early 15th century, such collar plates were integrated into the helmet itself to form the great bascinet.[6] Other forms of helmet such as the sallet which did not protect the lower face and throat with plate were paired with a separate bevor, and the armet was often fitted with a wrapper that included gorget lames protecting the throat. The mail standard was still worn under such bevors and wrappers, since the plates did not cover the back or sides of the neck.

At the beginning of the 16th century, the gorget reached its full development as a component of plate armour. Unlike previous gorget plates and bevors which sat over the cuirass and also required a separate mail collar to fully protect the neck, the developed gorget was worn under the cuirass and was intended to cover a larger area of the neck, nape, shoulders and upper chest, from which the edges of the backplate and breastplate had receded. The gorget served as an anchor point for the pauldrons, which either had holes in them to engage pins projecting from the gorget, or straps which could be buckled to the gorget. The neck was protected by a high collar of articulated lames, and the entire gorget was divided into front and back pieces which were hinged at the side so that the gorget could be put on and taken off. Some helmets had additional neck lames which overlapped the gorget, while others formed a tight seal with the rim of the gorget to eliminate any gaps.

By the 17th century there appeared a form of gorget with a low, unarticulated collar and larger front and back plates which covered more of the upper chest and back. In addition to being worn under the breast & backplates, as evidenced by at least two contemporary engravings, they were also commonly worn over civilian clothing or a buff coat. Some gorgets of this period were "parade" pieces that were beautifully etched, gilded, engraved, chased, embossed or enameled at great expense. Gradually the gorget grew smaller and more symbolic, becoming a single crescent shape worn on a chain which suspended the gorget ever lower on the chest, so that the gorget no longer protected the throat in normal wear.

The Japanese (samurai) form of the gorget, called a nodowa, was either fastened by itself around the neck or came as an integral part of the face defence or men yoroi. It consisted of several lames made of lacquered leather or iron, each of which either consisted of one piece or of scales laced together in horizontal rows. The lames were articulated vertically, overlapping bottom to top, by another set of silk laces.

As part of military uniforms

 
German military police gorget from World War II.

During the 18th and early 19th centuries, crescent-shaped gorgets of silver or silver gilt were worn by officers in most European armies, as a badge of rank and an indication that they were on duty. These last survivals of armour were much smaller (usually about three to four inches in width) than their Medieval predecessors and were suspended by chains or ribbons. In the British service they carried the Royal coat of arms until 1796 and thereafter the Royal Cypher.

Gorgets ceased to be worn by British army officers in 1830 and by their French counterparts 20 years later. They were still worn to a limited extent in the Imperial German Army until 1914, as a special distinction by officers of the Prussian Gardes du Corps and the 2nd Cuirassiers "Queen". Officers of the Spanish infantry continued to wear gorgets with the cypher of King Alfonso XIII in full dress, until the overthrow of the Monarchy in 1931. Mexican Federal army officers also wore the gorget with the badge of their branch as part of their parade uniform until 1947.

The gorget was revived as a uniform accessory in Nazi Germany, seeing widespread use within the German military and Nazi party organisations. During World War II, it continued to be used by Feldgendarmerie (military field police), who wore metal gorgets as emblems of authority. German police gorgets of this period typically were flat metal crescents with ornamental designs that were suspended by a chain worn around the neck. The Prussian-influenced Chilean army uses the German style metal gorget in parades and in the uniform of their Military Police.

In Sweden

As early as 1688, regulations provided for the wearing of gorgets by Swedish army officers. For those of captain's rank the gorget was gilt with the king's monogram under a crown in blue enamel, while more junior officers wore silver-plated gorgets with the initials in gold.[8]

The gorget was discontinued as a rank insignia for Swedish officers in the Swedish Armed Forces in 1792, when epaulettes were introduced. The gorget was revived in 1799, when the Officer of the day was given the privilege of wearing a gorget which featured the Swedish lesser coat of arms. It has since been a part of the officer's uniform (when he or she functions as "Officer of the day") a custom which continues.

Norway and Finland

The same use of the gorget also continues in Norway and Finland, worn by officers or corporals responsible for guard changes and "Inspecting Officers" (officer of the day). The officer of the day of a company (Finnish: päivystäjä) is usually a non-commissioned officer (or even a private), who guards the entrance and is responsible for security within company quarters.

Other peoples

Gorgets made of shell, as well as stone and copper,[9] have been found at archaeological sites of various ages associated with mound building cultures of Eastern North America, going back thousands of years.

Gorget stones are polished pieces of stones that were worn on Native Americans on the neck or chest as a decoration, ornament, or talisman.[10]

 
Influential Seminole leader Osceola wearing three metal gorgets in a portrait by George Catlin.

The British Empire awarded gorgets to chiefs of American Indian tribes both as tokens of goodwill and a badge of their high status.[11] Those being awarded a gorget were known as gorget captains [12] Gorgets were also awarded to African chiefs.[13]

In colonial Australia gorgets were given to Aboriginal people by government officials and pastoralists as insignia of high rank or reward for services to the settler community. Frequently inscribed with the word "King" along with the name of the tribal group to which the recipient belonged (despite the absence of this kind of rank among indigenous Australians), the "breastplates", as they came to be known, were highly regarded by those who received them.[14]

Gorget patches

 
A gorget patch as worn by an RAF Officer Cadet

The scarlet patches still worn on each side of the collar of the tunics of British Army general officers and senior officers are called "gorget patches" in reference to this article of armour. There were two types - the first, red with a crimson centre stripe, were for Colonels and Brigadiers, and red with a gold centre stripe for General Officers. Today, they signify an officer of the General Staff, to which all British officers are appointed on reaching the rank of Colonel. With limited exceptions such as senior officers of the Army Medical and Dental Corps, the historic colour differentials are no longer worn in the British service.

However, the historic colours are still used in the gorget patches of the Canadian Army. Air officers in the Indian and Sri Lankan air forces also wear gorget patches with one to five stars depending on their seniority.[15]

RAF officer cadets wear white gorget patches on their service dress and mess dress uniforms. Very similar collar patches are worn by British army officer cadets at Sandhurst on the standup collars of their dark-blue "Number One" dress uniforms. These features of modern uniforms are a residual survival from the earlier practice of suspending the actual gorgets from ribbons attached to buttons on both collars of the uniform. Such buttons were often mounted on a patch of coloured cloth or gold embroidery.

Modern versions

 
The gorget is in the upper right corner

Recent advances in protective armour have led to the functional gorget being reintroduced into the US Army and Marine Improved Outer Tactical Vest and Modular Tactical Vest systems respectively.

Other uses

The state flag of South Carolina features a crescent in the upper left quadrant which now resembles a crescent moon, but which some oral traditions have suggested may have once represented a gorget. The state flag derives from a flag designed by Colonel William Moultrie in 1775 with a blue ground and crescent based on the uniforms of the Second South Carolina Regiment, who wore a crescent with the tips pointing up on their hats. Through the 19th century, the crescent on the state flag also appeared with the tips pointing up, and it was not until the 20th century that it was turned on its side to resemble a crescent moon. The mystery of its original meaning is still unresolved, and the crescent as it appears on the modern state flag is normally interpreted as a moon.[16]

The term also refers to a patch of coloured feathers found on the throat or upper breast of some species of birds.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ Lossing, Benson John (1859). Mount Vernon and its Associations: Historical, Biographical and Pictorial. Selected Americana from Sabin's Dictionary. W.A. Townsend and Company. p. 345. OCLC 9269788.
  2. ^ Norris, Herbert (1999). Medieval costume and fashion. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. pp. 181. ISBN 9780486404868.
  3. ^ Lewandowski, Elizabeth J. (24 October 2011). The complete costume dictionary. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 123. ISBN 9780810877856.
  4. ^ Gleeson, Dermot F. (1934). "Discovery of Gold Gorget at Burren, Co. Clare". The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 4 (1): 138–139. JSTOR 25513720.
  5. ^ Ian LaSpina, "Defense for the Throat: A Layered Approach", Nov 1, 2015, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrFwI4eFhf0
  6. ^ Ian LaSpina, "Helmets: The Great Bascinet", Nov 21, 2015, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cuGoj9jA8_0
  7. ^ Cahill, Mary. "Before the Celts: treasures in gold and bronze". In:Ó Floinn, Raghnal; Wallace, Patrick (eds), Treasures of the National Museum of Ireland: Irish Antiquities. National Museum of Ireland, 2002. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-7171-2829-7
  8. ^ Preben Kannik, Alverdens Uniformer I Farver, p. 151
  9. ^ Waldman, Carl (2000). Atlas of the North American Indian, Revised Edition. Illustrated by Molly Braun. Checkmark Books, An imprint of Facts On File, Inc. p. 22. ISBN 0-8160-3975-5.
  10. ^ "Black Slate Gorget · Virginia Indian Archive".
  11. ^ p.9 Handbook of North American Indians: History of Indian-White Relations Government Printing Office, 1978
  12. ^ p. 286 Blegen, Theodore Christian & Heilbron, Bertha Lion Minnesota History Minnesota Historical Society, 1928
  13. ^ p.41 History of the Civilization and Christianization of South Africa; from its first settlement by the Dutch to the final surrender of it to the British Waugh & Innes, 1832
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-12-07. Retrieved 2011-04-14.
  15. ^ "Collar Tabs".
  16. ^ Hicks, Brian (July 11, 2007). "What the heck is that doodad on our state flag?". The Post and Courier. Charleston, South Carolina.
  17. ^ Campbell, Bruce; Lack, Elizabeth, eds. (1985). A Dictionary of Birds. Calton, Staffs, England: T & A D Poyser. p. 254. ISBN 0-85661-039-9.

External links

gorget, feathers, gorget, bird, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, js. For the feathers see gorget bird This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gorget news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message A gorget ˈ ɡ ɔːr dʒ ɪ t from the French gorge meaning throat was a band of linen wrapped around a woman s neck and head in the medieval period or the lower part of a simple chaperon hood 2 3 The term later described a steel or leather collar to protect the throat a set of pieces of plate armour or a single piece of plate armour hanging from the neck and covering the throat and chest Later particularly from the 18th century the gorget became primarily ornamental serving as a symbolic accessory on military uniforms a use which has survived in some armies The gorget in this 1772 portrait of Colonel George Washington by Charles Willson Peale was worn in the French and Indian War to show his rank as an officer in the Virginia Regiment 1 Elaborately decorated gilt brass gorget of c 1630 probably Dutch The term may also be used for other things such as items of jewellery worn around the throat region in several societies for example wide thin gold collars found in prehistoric Ireland dating to the Bronze Age 4 Contents 1 As part of armour 2 As part of military uniforms 2 1 In Sweden 2 2 Norway and Finland 3 Other peoples 4 Gorget patches 5 Modern versions 6 Other uses 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksAs part of armour Edit Gorget in a full suit of armour In the High Middle Ages when mail was the primary form of metal body armour used in Western Europe the mail coif protected the neck and lower face As more plate armour appeared to supplement mail during the 14th century the bascinet helmet incorporated a mail curtain called the aventail which protected the lower face neck and shoulders A separate mail collar called a pisan or standard was sometimes worn under the aventail as additional protection 5 Towards the end of the 14th century threats including the increased penetrating power of the lance when paired with a lance rest on the breastplate made more rigid forms of neck protection desirable One solution was a standing collar plate separate from the helmet that could be worn over the aventail with enough space between the collar and helmet that a man at arms could turn his head inside it In the early 15th century such collar plates were integrated into the helmet itself to form the great bascinet 6 Other forms of helmet such as the sallet which did not protect the lower face and throat with plate were paired with a separate bevor and the armet was often fitted with a wrapper that included gorget lames protecting the throat The mail standard was still worn under such bevors and wrappers since the plates did not cover the back or sides of the neck The Gleninsheen gold gorget Irish Bronze Age National Museum of Ireland 7 At the beginning of the 16th century the gorget reached its full development as a component of plate armour Unlike previous gorget plates and bevors which sat over the cuirass and also required a separate mail collar to fully protect the neck the developed gorget was worn under the cuirass and was intended to cover a larger area of the neck nape shoulders and upper chest from which the edges of the backplate and breastplate had receded The gorget served as an anchor point for the pauldrons which either had holes in them to engage pins projecting from the gorget or straps which could be buckled to the gorget The neck was protected by a high collar of articulated lames and the entire gorget was divided into front and back pieces which were hinged at the side so that the gorget could be put on and taken off Some helmets had additional neck lames which overlapped the gorget while others formed a tight seal with the rim of the gorget to eliminate any gaps By the 17th century there appeared a form of gorget with a low unarticulated collar and larger front and back plates which covered more of the upper chest and back In addition to being worn under the breast amp backplates as evidenced by at least two contemporary engravings they were also commonly worn over civilian clothing or a buff coat Some gorgets of this period were parade pieces that were beautifully etched gilded engraved chased embossed or enameled at great expense Gradually the gorget grew smaller and more symbolic becoming a single crescent shape worn on a chain which suspended the gorget ever lower on the chest so that the gorget no longer protected the throat in normal wear The Japanese samurai form of the gorget called a nodowa was either fastened by itself around the neck or came as an integral part of the face defence or men yoroi It consisted of several lames made of lacquered leather or iron each of which either consisted of one piece or of scales laced together in horizontal rows The lames were articulated vertically overlapping bottom to top by another set of silk laces As part of military uniforms Edit German military police gorget from World War II During the 18th and early 19th centuries crescent shaped gorgets of silver or silver gilt were worn by officers in most European armies as a badge of rank and an indication that they were on duty These last survivals of armour were much smaller usually about three to four inches in width than their Medieval predecessors and were suspended by chains or ribbons In the British service they carried the Royal coat of arms until 1796 and thereafter the Royal Cypher Gorgets ceased to be worn by British army officers in 1830 and by their French counterparts 20 years later They were still worn to a limited extent in the Imperial German Army until 1914 as a special distinction by officers of the Prussian Gardes du Corps and the 2nd Cuirassiers Queen Officers of the Spanish infantry continued to wear gorgets with the cypher of King Alfonso XIII in full dress until the overthrow of the Monarchy in 1931 Mexican Federal army officers also wore the gorget with the badge of their branch as part of their parade uniform until 1947 The gorget was revived as a uniform accessory in Nazi Germany seeing widespread use within the German military and Nazi party organisations During World War II it continued to be used by Feldgendarmerie military field police who wore metal gorgets as emblems of authority German police gorgets of this period typically were flat metal crescents with ornamental designs that were suspended by a chain worn around the neck The Prussian influenced Chilean army uses the German style metal gorget in parades and in the uniform of their Military Police In Sweden Edit As early as 1688 regulations provided for the wearing of gorgets by Swedish army officers For those of captain s rank the gorget was gilt with the king s monogram under a crown in blue enamel while more junior officers wore silver plated gorgets with the initials in gold 8 The gorget was discontinued as a rank insignia for Swedish officers in the Swedish Armed Forces in 1792 when epaulettes were introduced The gorget was revived in 1799 when the Officer of the day was given the privilege of wearing a gorget which featured the Swedish lesser coat of arms It has since been a part of the officer s uniform when he or she functions as Officer of the day a custom which continues Early Swedish gorget from the time of king Charles XI of Sweden for a colonel Gorget in silver for ensigns and lieutenants of the Swedish Army with the royal cypher of Gustav III Swedish Army Museum Gorget silver gilt for a captain with the royal cypher of Gustav III in enamel Swedish Army Museum Gorget silver gilt for majors lieutenant colonels and colonels of the Swedish Army with the royal cypher of Gustav III and two palm branches all enameled Swedish Army Museum Arvid Horn in a uniform with a gorget for the captain lieutenant of the Kunglig Majestats drabanter the gorget with the royal cypher of Charles XII of Sweden ca 1706 Peter Lilliehorn in the uniform and gorget of a major at the Kalmar Regiment the gorget with the royal cypher of Frederick I of Sweden 1727 Swedish gorget model 1799 for the officer of the day Swedish Army Museum Norway and Finland Edit The same use of the gorget also continues in Norway and Finland worn by officers or corporals responsible for guard changes and Inspecting Officers officer of the day The officer of the day of a company Finnish paivystaja is usually a non commissioned officer or even a private who guards the entrance and is responsible for security within company quarters Other peoples EditGorgets made of shell as well as stone and copper 9 have been found at archaeological sites of various ages associated with mound building cultures of Eastern North America going back thousands of years Gorget stones are polished pieces of stones that were worn on Native Americans on the neck or chest as a decoration ornament or talisman 10 Influential Seminole leader Osceola wearing three metal gorgets in a portrait by George Catlin The British Empire awarded gorgets to chiefs of American Indian tribes both as tokens of goodwill and a badge of their high status 11 Those being awarded a gorget were known as gorget captains 12 Gorgets were also awarded to African chiefs 13 In colonial Australia gorgets were given to Aboriginal people by government officials and pastoralists as insignia of high rank or reward for services to the settler community Frequently inscribed with the word King along with the name of the tribal group to which the recipient belonged despite the absence of this kind of rank among indigenous Australians the breastplates as they came to be known were highly regarded by those who received them 14 Gorget patches EditMain article Gorget patches A gorget patch as worn by an RAF Officer Cadet The scarlet patches still worn on each side of the collar of the tunics of British Army general officers and senior officers are called gorget patches in reference to this article of armour There were two types the first red with a crimson centre stripe were for Colonels and Brigadiers and red with a gold centre stripe for General Officers Today they signify an officer of the General Staff to which all British officers are appointed on reaching the rank of Colonel With limited exceptions such as senior officers of the Army Medical and Dental Corps the historic colour differentials are no longer worn in the British service However the historic colours are still used in the gorget patches of the Canadian Army Air officers in the Indian and Sri Lankan air forces also wear gorget patches with one to five stars depending on their seniority 15 RAF officer cadets wear white gorget patches on their service dress and mess dress uniforms Very similar collar patches are worn by British army officer cadets at Sandhurst on the standup collars of their dark blue Number One dress uniforms These features of modern uniforms are a residual survival from the earlier practice of suspending the actual gorgets from ribbons attached to buttons on both collars of the uniform Such buttons were often mounted on a patch of coloured cloth or gold embroidery Modern versions Edit The gorget is in the upper right cornerRecent advances in protective armour have led to the functional gorget being reintroduced into the US Army and Marine Improved Outer Tactical Vest and Modular Tactical Vest systems respectively Other uses EditThe state flag of South Carolina features a crescent in the upper left quadrant which now resembles a crescent moon but which some oral traditions have suggested may have once represented a gorget The state flag derives from a flag designed by Colonel William Moultrie in 1775 with a blue ground and crescent based on the uniforms of the Second South Carolina Regiment who wore a crescent with the tips pointing up on their hats Through the 19th century the crescent on the state flag also appeared with the tips pointing up and it was not until the 20th century that it was turned on its side to resemble a crescent moon The mystery of its original meaning is still unresolved and the crescent as it appears on the modern state flag is normally interpreted as a moon 16 The term also refers to a patch of coloured feathers found on the throat or upper breast of some species of birds 17 See also EditShell gorgetReferences Edit Lossing Benson John 1859 Mount Vernon and its Associations Historical Biographical and Pictorial Selected Americana from Sabin s Dictionary W A Townsend and Company p 345 OCLC 9269788 Norris Herbert 1999 Medieval costume and fashion Mineola N Y Dover Publications pp 181 ISBN 9780486404868 Lewandowski Elizabeth J 24 October 2011 The complete costume dictionary Lanham Md Scarecrow Press Inc p 123 ISBN 9780810877856 Gleeson Dermot F 1934 Discovery of Gold Gorget at Burren Co Clare The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 4 1 138 139 JSTOR 25513720 Ian LaSpina Defense for the Throat A Layered Approach Nov 1 2015 https www youtube com watch v MrFwI4eFhf0 Ian LaSpina Helmets The Great Bascinet Nov 21 2015 https www youtube com watch v cuGoj9jA8 0 Cahill Mary Before the Celts treasures in gold and bronze In o Floinn Raghnal Wallace Patrick eds Treasures of the National Museum of Ireland Irish Antiquities National Museum of Ireland 2002 p 100 ISBN 978 0 7171 2829 7 Preben Kannik Alverdens Uniformer I Farver p 151 Waldman Carl 2000 Atlas of the North American Indian Revised Edition Illustrated by Molly Braun Checkmark Books An imprint of Facts On File Inc p 22 ISBN 0 8160 3975 5 Black Slate Gorget Virginia Indian Archive p 9 Handbook of North American Indians History of Indian White Relations Government Printing Office 1978 p 286 Blegen Theodore Christian amp Heilbron Bertha Lion Minnesota History Minnesota Historical Society 1928 p 41 History of the Civilization and Christianization of South Africa from its first settlement by the Dutch to the final surrender of it to the British Waugh amp Innes 1832 National Museum of Australia Aboriginal Breastplates Archived from the original on 2011 12 07 Retrieved 2011 04 14 Collar Tabs Hicks Brian July 11 2007 What the heck is that doodad on our state flag The Post and Courier Charleston South Carolina Campbell Bruce Lack Elizabeth eds 1985 A Dictionary of Birds Calton Staffs England T amp A D Poyser p 254 ISBN 0 85661 039 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to gorgets Australian Aboriginal breastplates Archived 2011 12 07 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gorget amp oldid 1153022024, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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