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Jewish hat

The Jewish hat, also known as the Jewish cap, Judenhut (German) or Latin pileus cornutus ("horned skullcap"), was a cone-shaped pointed hat, often white or yellow, worn by Jews in Medieval Europe. Initially worn by choice, its wearing was enforced in some places in Europe after the 1215 Fourth Council of the Lateran for adult male Jews to wear while outside a ghetto to distinguish them from others. Like the Phrygian cap that it often resembles, the hat may have originated in pre-Islamic Persia, as a similar hat was worn by Babylonian Jews.

The Jewish poet Süßkind von Trimberg (on the right) wearing a Jewish hat (Codex Manesse, fourteenth century)

Modern distinctive or characteristic Jewish forms of male headgear include the kippah (skullcap), shtreimel, spodik, kolpik, and kashkets; see also Hasidic clothing.

Europe

Shape

 
Circumcision of Isaac, in the Jewish manuscript the "Regensburg Pentateuch", Germany, c. 1300

The shape of the hat is variable. Sometimes, especially in the thirteenth century, it is a soft Phrygian cap, but rather more common in the early period is a hat with a round circular brim—apparently stiff—curving round to a tapering top that ends in a point,[1] called the "so-called oil-can type" by Sara Lipton.[2] Smaller versions perching on top of the head are also seen. Sometimes a ring of some sort encircles the hat an inch or two over the top of the head. In the fourteenth century a ball or bobble appears at the top of the hat, and the tapering end becomes more of a stalk with a relatively constant width.[3] The top of the hat becomes flatter, or rounded (as in the Codex Manesse picture). The materials used are unclear from art, and may have included metal and woven plant materials as well as stiffened textiles and leather.

By the end of the Middle Ages the hat is steadily replaced by a variety of headgear including exotic flared Eastern style hats, turbans and, from the fifteenth century, wide flat hats and large berets. In pictures of Biblical scenes these sometimes represent attempts to portray the contemporary dress of the time worn in the Holy Land, but all the same styles are to be seen in some images of contemporary European scenes. Where a distinctive pointed Jewish hat remains it has become much less defined in shape, and baggy. Loose turbans, wide flat hats, and berets, as well as new fur hat styles from the Pale of Settlement, remain associated with Jews up to the eighteenth century and beyond.

History

 
This Jewish figure wearing a Jewish hat, in a detail of a medieval Hebrew calendar, reminded Jews of the palm branch (Lulav), the myrtle twigs, the willow branches, and the citron (Etrog) to be held in the hand and to be brought to the synagogue during the holiday of sukkot.

The origin of the hat is unclear, although it is often seen as ultimately evolving from the same origin as the mitre, perhaps from late Roman styles, which may themselves derive from the hats of ancient Persian clergy. Hats worn (by Pharaoh's advisors, among others) in the illustrations to the Old English Hexateuch, a manuscript of around 1030, have been seen as an early form, and they appear in the Mosan Stavelot Bible of 1097.[4]

The first recorded instance of a “Jewish hat” or “Judenhut” was around the 11th century in the Flanders region.[5] The wearing of these distinctive hats originate from European Christians who wore such hats before mandating that it become a symbol for European Jews. According to Sara Lipton, "The few surviving early medieval references to Jewish clothing likewise suggest that Jews dressed no differently from their Gentile neighbor".[6]

In Europe, the Jewish hat was worn in France from the eleventh century, and Italy from the twelfth. The Gniezno Doors were probably made in Germany around 1175, and two Jewish merchants depicted on the doors wear them. Under Jewish law, observant Jews should keep their heads covered almost all the time,[7] and indeed men of all religious groups tended to wear hats when outside in the Middle Ages to a much greater extent than today.[8]

Unlike the yellow badge, the Jewish hat is often seen in illustrated Hebrew manuscripts, and was later included by German Jews in their seals and coats of arms, suggesting that at least initially it was regarded by European Jews as "an element of traditional garb, rather than an imposed discrimination".[9] The hat is also worn in Christian pictures by figures such as Saint Joseph and sometimes Jesus (see below). However, once "made obligatory, the hat, hitherto deliberately different from hats worn by Christians, was viewed by Jews in a negative light".[10] A provincial synod held in Breslau in 1267 said that since Jews had stopped wearing the pointed hats they used to wear, this would be made compulsory.[11]

 
Christian painting of an Old Testament sacrifice, 1483, with various forms of Jewish hat, as well as turbans and other exotic styles. By this date it is hard to judge how illustrations like these relate to actual contemporary dress in Europe, or are an attempt to recreate historically appropriate ancient dress from styles of the contemporary Middle East.

The Fourth Council of the Lateran of 1215 ruled that Jews and Muslims must be distinguishable by their dress (Latin "habitus"), the rationale given being: "In some provinces the dress of Jews and Saracens distinguishes them from Christians, but in others a degree of confusion has arisen, so that they cannot be recognised by any distinguishing marks. As a result, in error Christians have sexual intercourse with Jewish or Saracen women, and Jews and Saracens have intercourse with Christian women. In order that the crime of such an accursed mingling shall not in future have an excuse and an evasion under the pretext of error, we resolve that (Jews and Saracens) of both sexes in all Christian lands shall distinguish themselves publicly from other people by their dress. According to the testimony of scripture, such a precept was already made by Moses (Lev.19.19; Deut.22.5.11)".[12]

Local regulations

However, not all European medieval monarchs followed these pontifical resolutions. King Andrew II of Hungary (1177–1235), ignored on several occasions demands from the Pope, which gained him excommunication twice. At that time many Jews were in royal service. The excommunications even forbade Andrew II from being present at his daughter Elisabeth of Hungary's canonization in Germany.[13] The hat was mostly found north of the Alps, despite some of the earliest examples being seen in Italy, and was not found in Spain.

Additional rules were imposed by local rulers at various times. The council decision was confirmed by the Council of Vienne of 1311–12. In 1267 the hat was made compulsory in Vienna. A doctor was given a temporary dispensation from wearing it in Venice in 1528, at the request of various distinguished patients[14] (at the time in Venice each profession had special clothing rules). Pope Paul IV ordered in 1555 that in the Papal States it must be a yellow, peaked hat, and from 1567 for twenty years it was compulsory in Lithuania, but by this period it is rarely seen in most of Europe.[15]

As an outcome of the Jewish Emancipation its use was formally discontinued, although it had been declining long before that, and is not often seen after 1500; the various forms of the yellow badge were far more long-lasting.[16] This was an alternative form of distinguishing mark, not found in Europe before 1215, and later reintroduced by the Nazis. It was probably more widely required by local laws, for example English legislation concentrated on the badge, which took the form of the two Tablets of the Law. In some pictures from all parts of the Middle Ages, rabbis or other Jewish leaders wear the Jewish hat when other Jews do not, which may reflect reality.[17]

Such examples of this hat-wearing can be seen nearly 350 years after the Fourth Lateran Council. Regions divided into many states, such as Renaissance Italy and Germany, had local laws in this as in other fields, leading to difficulties for travellers who might not be aware of the local regulations. For example, in Italy a Leone Segele was arrested in Lodi for wearing a black hat, as was acceptable in his home city of Genoa, instead of a yellow one, required in Lodi.[18] These dress codes became a normal part of what it meant to be a Jew living inside Catholic dominated European societies.[19]

In a late addition to local rulings, the very strict and locally unpopular Counter Reformation Pope Paul IV ordered in 1555 that all Jews in Rome were required to wear the yellow hat "under the severest penalties." When he died, his statue, erected before the Campidoglio just months before, had a yellow hat placed on it (similar to the yellow hat Paul IV had forced Jews to wear in public). After a mock trial, the statue was decapitated.[20] It was then thrown into the Tiber.[21]

In art

The Jewish hat is frequently used in medieval art to denote Jews of the Biblical period. Often the Jews so shown are those shown in an unfavourable light by the story being depicted, such as the money-changers expelled by Jesus from the Temple (Matthew 21:12–17), but this is by no means always the case. The husband of Mary, Saint Joseph, is often shown wearing a Jewish hat, and Jesus himself may be shown wearing one, especially in depictions of the Meeting at Emmaus, where his disciples do not recognise him at first (Luke.24.13-32).[22] Sometimes it is used to distinguish Jews from other peoples such as Egyptians or Philistines. It is often depicted in art from times and places where the hat does not seem to have actually been commonly worn by Jews, "as an external and largely arbitrary sign devised by Christian iconographers", one of a number of useful visual ways of identifying types of persons in medieval art.[23] In notable contrast to forms of Jewish badge, the Jewish hat is often seen in Hebrew manuscript illuminations such as Haggadot made in medieval Europe (picture above). In the Birds' Head Haggadah (Germany, c. 1300), the figures wear the hat when sitting to eat the Passover Seder.[24]

However, in Christian art the wearing of the hat can be sometimes be seen to express an attitude to those wearing it. In one extreme example in a manuscript of the Bible moralisée, an illustration shows the rod of Aaron, which has turned into a serpent, turning on the Pharaoh's magicians (Exodus, 7:10-12); Moses and Aaron do not wear the hat but the Egyptian magicians do, signifying not that they are Jews, but that they are like Jews, i.e. on the wrong side of the dispute. The paired roundel below shows two tonsured clerics confronting a group of hat-wearing Jews, and has a Latin caption explaining "Moses and Aaron signify good prelates who, in explaining the words of the Gospel, devour the false words of the Jews".[25] In another scene showing the conversion of Jews and other non-Christians at the end of the world, a series of figures show different stages of removing their hats to signify the stages they have reached in their conversion, so that "the hat does not just identify Jews; it functions independently of its placement to signify infidelity and recalcitrant Jewishness".[26] Other scenes in Christian art where some characters often wear it include the Circumcision of Christ and Saint Helena Finding the True Cross, where the medieval legend specified a Jewish character. The Jewish hat worn in reality was probably less pointy than is usually shown in art.

William III the Brave (1425–1482) of Meissen, minted a silver groschen known as the Judenkopf Groschen. Its obverse portrait shows a man with a pointed beard wearing a Judenhut, which the populace took as depicting a typical Jew.[27]

Transfer

When the plague broke out in 1349, Jews were expelled from much of German-speaking Europe. The pointed hat which had formerly been used to depict Jews, now was also used for other outcasts. Naomi Lubrich claims that the pointed hat was transferred in iconography to criminals, pagans, and other non-Christian outsiders, in particular sorcerers[28] and dwarfs.[29] Among the examples are laws, for example in Hungary in 1421, according to which people convicted of sorcery were forced to put on a Jewish hat for public shaming.

Regulated dress for Jews in the Islamic world

For dhimmis to be clearly distinguishable from Muslims in public, Muslim rulers often prohibited dhimmis from wearing certain types of clothing, while forcing them to put on highly distinctive garments, usually of a bright colour. These included headgear, though this was not usually the primary element. At some times the regulated dress of Christians and Jews differed, at others it did not. As in Europe, the degree to which the recorded regulations were enforced is hard to assess, and probably varied greatly.

Islamic scholars cited the Pact of Umar in which Christians supposedly took an obligation to "always dress in the same way wherever we may be, and… bind the zunar [wide belt] round our waists". Al-Nawawi required dhimmis to wear a piece of yellow cloth and a belt, as well as a metallic ring, inside public baths.[30][better source needed]

Regulations on dhimmi clothing varied frequently to please the whims of the ruler. Although the initiation of such regulations is usually attributed to Umar I, historical evidence suggests that it was the Abbasid caliphs who pioneered this practice. In 850 the caliph al‑Mutawakkil ordered Christians and Jews to wear both a sash called a zunnar and a distinctive kind of shawl or headscarf called a taylasin (the Christians had already been required to wear the sash).[31] He also required them to wear small bells in public baths. In the eleventh century, the Fatimid caliph Al-Hakim, whose various extreme decrees and actions are usually attributed to mental illness, ordered Christians to put on half-meter wooden crosses and Jews to wear wooden calves around their necks. In the late twelfth century, Almohad ruler Abu Yusuf ordered the Jews of the Maghreb to wear dark blue garments with long sleeves and saddle-like caps. His grandson Abdallah al-Adil made a concession after appeals from the Jews, relaxing the required clothing to yellow garments and turbans. In the sixteenth century, Jews of the Maghreb could only wear sandals made of rushes and black turbans or caps with an extra red piece of cloth.[32]

Ottoman sultans continued to regulate the clothing of their non-Muslim subjects. In 1577, Murad III issued a firman forbidding Jews and Christians from wearing dresses, turbans, and sandals. In 1580, he changed his mind, restricting the previous prohibition to turbans and requiring dhimmis to wear black shoes; Jews and Christians also had to wear red and black hats, respectively. Observing in 1730 that some Muslims took to the habit of wearing caps similar to those of the Jews, Mahmud I ordered the hanging of the perpetrators. Mustafa III personally helped to enforce his decrees regarding clothes. In 1758, he was walking incognito in Istanbul and ordered the beheading of a Jew and an Armenian seen dressed in forbidden attire. The last Ottoman decree affirming the distinctive clothing for dhimmis was issued in 1837 by Mahmud II. Discriminatory clothing was not enforced in those Ottoman provinces where Christians were the majority, such as Greece and the Balkans.[32]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For example as worn by the Old Testament figures on the Klosterneuburg Altar of 1181
  2. ^ Lipton, 16
  3. ^ Occasionally small straight "stalks" are seen earlier, e.g. Schreckenberg:77, illus 4, of c. 1170
  4. ^ Silverman, 55-56
  5. ^ Silverman, Eric (2013). A Cultural History of Jewish Dress. Bloomsburg Academic. pp. 55–57.
  6. ^ Sara, Lipton (2014). Dark Mirror: The Medieval Origins of Anti-Jewish Iconography. Henry Holt and Company. p. 15.
  7. ^ Although this may not yet have acquired the force of law at this period. See Roth op cit.
  8. ^ Silverman, 56
  9. ^ Piponnier and Mane, p. 138; Silverman, 57; Seals from Norman Roth, op cit. Also Schreckenburg p. 15 & passim.
  10. ^ Piponnier & Mane, 138 (quoted)
  11. ^ Medieval Jewish History: An Encyclopedia. Edited by Norman Roth, Routledge 2008-02-25 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Schreckenburg, p.15
  13. ^ Fehér, J. (1967). Magyar Középkori Inkvizicio. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Editorial Transilvania.
  14. ^ "Mantino, Jacob ben Samuel". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  15. ^ Papal Bull Cum nimis absurdum. Lithuania, JE: "Yellow badge".
  16. ^ Schreckenburg:288-296
  17. ^ For example in the enigmatic illustrations to the Golden Haggadah of Darmstadt, of about 1300. See sacrifice illustration below also.
  18. ^ Cassen, Flora (2019). "Jewish Travelers in early Modern Italy: Visible and Invisible Resistance to The Jewish Badge". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ Cassen, Flora.“Jewish Travelers in Early Modern Italy: Visible and Invisible Resistance to The Jewish Badge.” Academia, November 28, 2019.
  20. ^ Stow, Kenneth (2001). Theater of Acculturation: The Roman Ghetto in the 16th Century. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-0295980256.
  21. ^ Setton, Kenneth M. (1984). The Papacy and the Levant, 1204-1571. Volume IV: The Sixteenth Century. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. p. 719. ISBN 978-0871691149.
  22. ^ Schreckenburg: 125–196. A twefth-century English example is in the Getty Museum 2010-06-07 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Lipton, 16-19, 17 quoted
  24. ^ Meyer Schapiro, Selected Papers, volume 3, Late Antique, Early Christian and Mediaeval Art, pp. 380-86, 1980, Chatto & Windus, London, ISBN 0-7011-2514-4; Lipton, 16-17
  25. ^ Lipton, 18; the image is on folio 25c of Vienna ONB Codex 1179 Bible moralisée.
  26. ^ Lipton, 19; ONB Codex 1179, f. 181a
  27. ^ Saurma no. 4386
  28. ^ Naomi, Lubrich. ""From Judenhut to Zauberhut: A Jewish Sign Proliferates", in: Asdiwal, 10, 2015, 136–162".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  29. ^ Lubrich, Naomi. ""The Wandering Hat: Iterations of the Medieval Jewish Hat", in: Jewish History, 29 (2015), 203–244". JSTOR 24709777.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  30. ^ Al-Nawawi, Minhadj, quoted in Bat Ye'or (2002). Islam and Dhimmitude. Where Civilizations Collide. Madison/Teaneck, J: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press/Associated University Presses. ISBN 0-8386-3943-7. p. 91
  31. ^ Medieval Jewish History: An Encyclopedia. Edited by Norman Roth, Routledge 2008-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ a b Bat Ye’or (2002), pp. 91–96

References

Parts of this article are translated from de:Judenhut of 13 July 2005
  • Judenhut at the Jewish Encyclopaedia
  • Lipton, Sara, Images of Intolerance: The Representation of Jews and Judaism in the Bible moralisée, 1999, University of California Press, ISBN 0520215516, 9780520215511, Amazon preview
  • Lubrich, Naomi, “The Wandering Hat: Iterations of the Medieval Jewish Hat”, in: Jewish History, 29 (2015), 203–244
  • Lubrich, Naomi, “From Judenhut to Zauberhut: A Jewish Sign Proliferates”, in: Asdiwal, 10, 2015, 136–162
  • Françoise Piponnier and Perrine Mane; Dress in the Middle Ages, Yale UP, 1997; ISBN 0-300-06906-5
  • Roth, Norman,
  • Schreckenburg, Heinz, The Jews in Christian Art, 1996, Continuum, New York, ISBN 0-8264-0936-9
  • Silverman, Eric, A Cultural History of Jewish Dress, 2013, A&C Black, ISBN 1847882862, 9781847882868, google books

Further reading

  • Straus Raphael, The "Jewish Hat" as an Aspect of Social History, Jewish Social Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1 (Jan., 1942), pp. 59–72, Indiana University Press. JSTOR 4615188.

External links

  • PBS feature
  • Website in German with many illustrations

jewish, this, article, about, headgear, medieval, european, jews, modern, jewish, skullcap, kippah, also, known, jewish, judenhut, german, latin, pileus, cornutus, horned, skullcap, cone, shaped, pointed, often, white, yellow, worn, jews, medieval, europe, ini. This article is about the headgear of medieval European Jews For the modern Jewish skullcap see Kippah The Jewish hat also known as the Jewish cap Judenhut German or Latin pileus cornutus horned skullcap was a cone shaped pointed hat often white or yellow worn by Jews in Medieval Europe Initially worn by choice its wearing was enforced in some places in Europe after the 1215 Fourth Council of the Lateran for adult male Jews to wear while outside a ghetto to distinguish them from others Like the Phrygian cap that it often resembles the hat may have originated in pre Islamic Persia as a similar hat was worn by Babylonian Jews The Jewish poet Susskind von Trimberg on the right wearing a Jewish hat Codex Manesse fourteenth century Modern distinctive or characteristic Jewish forms of male headgear include the kippah skullcap shtreimel spodik kolpik and kashkets see also Hasidic clothing Contents 1 Europe 1 1 Shape 1 2 History 1 3 Local regulations 2 In art 3 Transfer 4 Regulated dress for Jews in the Islamic world 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEurope EditShape Edit Circumcision of Isaac in the Jewish manuscript the Regensburg Pentateuch Germany c 1300 The shape of the hat is variable Sometimes especially in the thirteenth century it is a soft Phrygian cap but rather more common in the early period is a hat with a round circular brim apparently stiff curving round to a tapering top that ends in a point 1 called the so called oil can type by Sara Lipton 2 Smaller versions perching on top of the head are also seen Sometimes a ring of some sort encircles the hat an inch or two over the top of the head In the fourteenth century a ball or bobble appears at the top of the hat and the tapering end becomes more of a stalk with a relatively constant width 3 The top of the hat becomes flatter or rounded as in the Codex Manesse picture The materials used are unclear from art and may have included metal and woven plant materials as well as stiffened textiles and leather By the end of the Middle Ages the hat is steadily replaced by a variety of headgear including exotic flared Eastern style hats turbans and from the fifteenth century wide flat hats and large berets In pictures of Biblical scenes these sometimes represent attempts to portray the contemporary dress of the time worn in the Holy Land but all the same styles are to be seen in some images of contemporary European scenes Where a distinctive pointed Jewish hat remains it has become much less defined in shape and baggy Loose turbans wide flat hats and berets as well as new fur hat styles from the Pale of Settlement remain associated with Jews up to the eighteenth century and beyond History Edit This Jewish figure wearing a Jewish hat in a detail of a medieval Hebrew calendar reminded Jews of the palm branch Lulav the myrtle twigs the willow branches and the citron Etrog to be held in the hand and to be brought to the synagogue during the holiday of sukkot The origin of the hat is unclear although it is often seen as ultimately evolving from the same origin as the mitre perhaps from late Roman styles which may themselves derive from the hats of ancient Persian clergy Hats worn by Pharaoh s advisors among others in the illustrations to the Old English Hexateuch a manuscript of around 1030 have been seen as an early form and they appear in the Mosan Stavelot Bible of 1097 4 The first recorded instance of a Jewish hat or Judenhut was around the 11th century in the Flanders region 5 The wearing of these distinctive hats originate from European Christians who wore such hats before mandating that it become a symbol for European Jews According to Sara Lipton The few surviving early medieval references to Jewish clothing likewise suggest that Jews dressed no differently from their Gentile neighbor 6 In Europe the Jewish hat was worn in France from the eleventh century and Italy from the twelfth The Gniezno Doors were probably made in Germany around 1175 and two Jewish merchants depicted on the doors wear them Under Jewish law observant Jews should keep their heads covered almost all the time 7 and indeed men of all religious groups tended to wear hats when outside in the Middle Ages to a much greater extent than today 8 Unlike the yellow badge the Jewish hat is often seen in illustrated Hebrew manuscripts and was later included by German Jews in their seals and coats of arms suggesting that at least initially it was regarded by European Jews as an element of traditional garb rather than an imposed discrimination 9 The hat is also worn in Christian pictures by figures such as Saint Joseph and sometimes Jesus see below However once made obligatory the hat hitherto deliberately different from hats worn by Christians was viewed by Jews in a negative light 10 A provincial synod held in Breslau in 1267 said that since Jews had stopped wearing the pointed hats they used to wear this would be made compulsory 11 Christian painting of an Old Testament sacrifice 1483 with various forms of Jewish hat as well as turbans and other exotic styles By this date it is hard to judge how illustrations like these relate to actual contemporary dress in Europe or are an attempt to recreate historically appropriate ancient dress from styles of the contemporary Middle East The Fourth Council of the Lateran of 1215 ruled that Jews and Muslims must be distinguishable by their dress Latin habitus the rationale given being In some provinces the dress of Jews and Saracens distinguishes them from Christians but in others a degree of confusion has arisen so that they cannot be recognised by any distinguishing marks As a result in error Christians have sexual intercourse with Jewish or Saracen women and Jews and Saracens have intercourse with Christian women In order that the crime of such an accursed mingling shall not in future have an excuse and an evasion under the pretext of error we resolve that Jews and Saracens of both sexes in all Christian lands shall distinguish themselves publicly from other people by their dress According to the testimony of scripture such a precept was already made by Moses Lev 19 19 Deut 22 5 11 12 Local regulations Edit However not all European medieval monarchs followed these pontifical resolutions King Andrew II of Hungary 1177 1235 ignored on several occasions demands from the Pope which gained him excommunication twice At that time many Jews were in royal service The excommunications even forbade Andrew II from being present at his daughter Elisabeth of Hungary s canonization in Germany 13 The hat was mostly found north of the Alps despite some of the earliest examples being seen in Italy and was not found in Spain Additional rules were imposed by local rulers at various times The council decision was confirmed by the Council of Vienne of 1311 12 In 1267 the hat was made compulsory in Vienna A doctor was given a temporary dispensation from wearing it in Venice in 1528 at the request of various distinguished patients 14 at the time in Venice each profession had special clothing rules Pope Paul IV ordered in 1555 that in the Papal States it must be a yellow peaked hat and from 1567 for twenty years it was compulsory in Lithuania but by this period it is rarely seen in most of Europe 15 As an outcome of the Jewish Emancipation its use was formally discontinued although it had been declining long before that and is not often seen after 1500 the various forms of the yellow badge were far more long lasting 16 This was an alternative form of distinguishing mark not found in Europe before 1215 and later reintroduced by the Nazis It was probably more widely required by local laws for example English legislation concentrated on the badge which took the form of the two Tablets of the Law In some pictures from all parts of the Middle Ages rabbis or other Jewish leaders wear the Jewish hat when other Jews do not which may reflect reality 17 Such examples of this hat wearing can be seen nearly 350 years after the Fourth Lateran Council Regions divided into many states such as Renaissance Italy and Germany had local laws in this as in other fields leading to difficulties for travellers who might not be aware of the local regulations For example in Italy a Leone Segele was arrested in Lodi for wearing a black hat as was acceptable in his home city of Genoa instead of a yellow one required in Lodi 18 These dress codes became a normal part of what it meant to be a Jew living inside Catholic dominated European societies 19 In a late addition to local rulings the very strict and locally unpopular Counter Reformation Pope Paul IV ordered in 1555 that all Jews in Rome were required to wear the yellow hat under the severest penalties When he died his statue erected before the Campidoglio just months before had a yellow hat placed on it similar to the yellow hat Paul IV had forced Jews to wear in public After a mock trial the statue was decapitated 20 It was then thrown into the Tiber 21 In art Edit Circumcision of Christ Austria c 1340 The Jewish hat is frequently used in medieval art to denote Jews of the Biblical period Often the Jews so shown are those shown in an unfavourable light by the story being depicted such as the money changers expelled by Jesus from the Temple Matthew 21 12 17 but this is by no means always the case The husband of Mary Saint Joseph is often shown wearing a Jewish hat and Jesus himself may be shown wearing one especially in depictions of the Meeting at Emmaus where his disciples do not recognise him at first Luke 24 13 32 22 Sometimes it is used to distinguish Jews from other peoples such as Egyptians or Philistines It is often depicted in art from times and places where the hat does not seem to have actually been commonly worn by Jews as an external and largely arbitrary sign devised by Christian iconographers one of a number of useful visual ways of identifying types of persons in medieval art 23 In notable contrast to forms of Jewish badge the Jewish hat is often seen in Hebrew manuscript illuminations such as Haggadot made in medieval Europe picture above In the Birds Head Haggadah Germany c 1300 the figures wear the hat when sitting to eat the Passover Seder 24 However in Christian art the wearing of the hat can be sometimes be seen to express an attitude to those wearing it In one extreme example in a manuscript of the Bible moralisee an illustration shows the rod of Aaron which has turned into a serpent turning on the Pharaoh s magicians Exodus 7 10 12 Moses and Aaron do not wear the hat but the Egyptian magicians do signifying not that they are Jews but that they are like Jews i e on the wrong side of the dispute The paired roundel below shows two tonsured clerics confronting a group of hat wearing Jews and has a Latin caption explaining Moses and Aaron signify good prelates who in explaining the words of the Gospel devour the false words of the Jews 25 In another scene showing the conversion of Jews and other non Christians at the end of the world a series of figures show different stages of removing their hats to signify the stages they have reached in their conversion so that the hat does not just identify Jews it functions independently of its placement to signify infidelity and recalcitrant Jewishness 26 Other scenes in Christian art where some characters often wear it include the Circumcision of Christ and Saint Helena Finding the True Cross where the medieval legend specified a Jewish character The Jewish hat worn in reality was probably less pointy than is usually shown in art William III the Brave 1425 1482 of Meissen minted a silver groschen known as the Judenkopf Groschen Its obverse portrait shows a man with a pointed beard wearing a Judenhut which the populace took as depicting a typical Jew 27 Transfer EditWhen the plague broke out in 1349 Jews were expelled from much of German speaking Europe The pointed hat which had formerly been used to depict Jews now was also used for other outcasts Naomi Lubrich claims that the pointed hat was transferred in iconography to criminals pagans and other non Christian outsiders in particular sorcerers 28 and dwarfs 29 Among the examples are laws for example in Hungary in 1421 according to which people convicted of sorcery were forced to put on a Jewish hat for public shaming Regulated dress for Jews in the Islamic world EditFor dhimmis to be clearly distinguishable from Muslims in public Muslim rulers often prohibited dhimmis from wearing certain types of clothing while forcing them to put on highly distinctive garments usually of a bright colour These included headgear though this was not usually the primary element At some times the regulated dress of Christians and Jews differed at others it did not As in Europe the degree to which the recorded regulations were enforced is hard to assess and probably varied greatly Islamic scholars cited the Pact of Umar in which Christians supposedly took an obligation to always dress in the same way wherever we may be and bind the zunar wide belt round our waists Al Nawawi required dhimmis to wear a piece of yellow cloth and a belt as well as a metallic ring inside public baths 30 better source needed Regulations on dhimmi clothing varied frequently to please the whims of the ruler Although the initiation of such regulations is usually attributed to Umar I historical evidence suggests that it was the Abbasid caliphs who pioneered this practice In 850 the caliph al Mutawakkil ordered Christians and Jews to wear both a sash called a zunnar and a distinctive kind of shawl or headscarf called a taylasin the Christians had already been required to wear the sash 31 He also required them to wear small bells in public baths In the eleventh century the Fatimid caliph Al Hakim whose various extreme decrees and actions are usually attributed to mental illness ordered Christians to put on half meter wooden crosses and Jews to wear wooden calves around their necks In the late twelfth century Almohad ruler Abu Yusuf ordered the Jews of the Maghreb to wear dark blue garments with long sleeves and saddle like caps His grandson Abdallah al Adil made a concession after appeals from the Jews relaxing the required clothing to yellow garments and turbans In the sixteenth century Jews of the Maghreb could only wear sandals made of rushes and black turbans or caps with an extra red piece of cloth 32 Ottoman sultans continued to regulate the clothing of their non Muslim subjects In 1577 Murad III issued a firman forbidding Jews and Christians from wearing dresses turbans and sandals In 1580 he changed his mind restricting the previous prohibition to turbans and requiring dhimmis to wear black shoes Jews and Christians also had to wear red and black hats respectively Observing in 1730 that some Muslims took to the habit of wearing caps similar to those of the Jews Mahmud I ordered the hanging of the perpetrators Mustafa III personally helped to enforce his decrees regarding clothes In 1758 he was walking incognito in Istanbul and ordered the beheading of a Jew and an Armenian seen dressed in forbidden attire The last Ottoman decree affirming the distinctive clothing for dhimmis was issued in 1837 by Mahmud II Discriminatory clothing was not enforced in those Ottoman provinces where Christians were the majority such as Greece and the Balkans 32 Gallery Edit Saint Helena Finding the True Cross Weissenau Abbey Germany c 1170 Moses and the Bronze Serpent German c 1225 1230 Daniel in stained glass Augsburg Germany first half of twelfth century German Jews of the twelfth century From Herrad von Landsperg Hortus deliciarum Burning and killing of Jews by the Knight Volkmar at the time of the First Crusade Prague twelfth century German Nativity of Mary with Mary s father Joachim wearing the hat Coat of arms of Judenburg Austria Valdemar Atterdag holding Visby to ransom 1361 by Carl Gustaf Hellqvist 1851 1890 features a Jewish merchant wearing a Judenhut at right Adoration of the Magi by Hieronymus Bosch with the infant Christ being shadowed by the Jewish false Messiah who is seen half naked wearing a pointed cap in the stable doorway Judenkopf GroschenSee also Edit Judaism portal Fashion portalConical hat Court Jew Dhimmi laws Ethnic segregation Fulani hat Ghetto Melah List of hats and headgear Ottoman Millet system Tembel hat Yellow badge Clothing laws by countryNotes Edit For example as worn by the Old Testament figures on the Klosterneuburg Altar of 1181 Lipton 16 Occasionally small straight stalks are seen earlier e g Schreckenberg 77 illus 4 of c 1170 Silverman 55 56 Silverman Eric 2013 A Cultural History of Jewish Dress Bloomsburg Academic pp 55 57 Sara Lipton 2014 Dark Mirror The Medieval Origins of Anti Jewish Iconography Henry Holt and Company p 15 Although this may not yet have acquired the force of law at this period See Roth op cit Silverman 56 Piponnier and Mane p 138 Silverman 57 Seals from Norman Roth op cit Also Schreckenburg p 15 amp passim Piponnier amp Mane 138 quoted Medieval Jewish History An Encyclopedia Edited by Norman Roth Routledge Archived 2008 02 25 at the Wayback Machine Schreckenburg p 15 Feher J 1967 Magyar Kozepkori Inkvizicio Buenos Aires Argentina Editorial Transilvania Mantino Jacob ben Samuel Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved 5 July 2014 Papal Bull Cum nimis absurdum Lithuania JE Yellow badge Schreckenburg 288 296 For example in the enigmatic illustrations to the Golden Haggadah of Darmstadt of about 1300 See sacrifice illustration below also Cassen Flora 2019 Jewish Travelers in early Modern Italy Visible and Invisible Resistance to The Jewish Badge a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Cassen Flora Jewish Travelers in Early Modern Italy Visible and Invisible Resistance to The Jewish Badge Academia November 28 2019 Stow Kenneth 2001 Theater of Acculturation The Roman Ghetto in the 16th Century Seattle University of Washington Press p 41 ISBN 978 0295980256 Setton Kenneth M 1984 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 Volume IV The Sixteenth Century Philadelphia American Philosophical Society p 719 ISBN 978 0871691149 Schreckenburg 125 196 A twefth century English example is in the Getty Museum Archived 2010 06 07 at the Wayback Machine Lipton 16 19 17 quoted Meyer Schapiro Selected Papers volume 3 Late Antique Early Christian and Mediaeval Art pp 380 86 1980 Chatto amp Windus London ISBN 0 7011 2514 4 Lipton 16 17 Lipton 18 the image is on folio 25c of Vienna ONB Codex 1179 Bible moralisee Lipton 19 ONB Codex 1179 f 181a Saurma no 4386 Naomi Lubrich From Judenhut to Zauberhut A Jewish Sign Proliferates in Asdiwal 10 2015 136 162 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Lubrich Naomi The Wandering Hat Iterations of the Medieval Jewish Hat in Jewish History 29 2015 203 244 JSTOR 24709777 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Al Nawawi Minhadj quoted in Bat Ye or 2002 Islam and Dhimmitude Where Civilizations Collide Madison Teaneck J Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Associated University Presses ISBN 0 8386 3943 7 p 91 Medieval Jewish History An Encyclopedia Edited by Norman Roth Routledge Archived 2008 10 24 at the Wayback Machine a b Bat Ye or 2002 pp 91 96References EditParts of this article are translated from de Judenhut of 13 July 2005Judenhut at the Jewish Encyclopaedia Lipton Sara Images of Intolerance The Representation of Jews and Judaism in the Bible moralisee 1999 University of California Press ISBN 0520215516 9780520215511 Amazon preview Lubrich Naomi The Wandering Hat Iterations of the Medieval Jewish Hat in Jewish History 29 2015 203 244 Lubrich Naomi From Judenhut to Zauberhut A Jewish Sign Proliferates in Asdiwal 10 2015 136 162 Francoise Piponnier and Perrine Mane Dress in the Middle Ages Yale UP 1997 ISBN 0 300 06906 5 Roth Norman Was There a Jewish Hat Schreckenburg Heinz The Jews in Christian Art 1996 Continuum New York ISBN 0 8264 0936 9 Silverman Eric A Cultural History of Jewish Dress 2013 A amp C Black ISBN 1847882862 9781847882868 google booksFurther reading EditStraus Raphael The Jewish Hat as an Aspect of Social History Jewish Social Studies Vol 4 No 1 Jan 1942 pp 59 72 Indiana University Press JSTOR 4615188 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jewish hat PBS feature Website in German with many illustrations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish hat amp oldid 1150696907, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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