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Livery

A livery /ˈlɪvəri/ is an identifying design, such as a uniform, ornament, symbol or insignia that designates ownership or affiliation, often found on an individual or vehicle. Livery often includes elements of the heraldry relating to the individual or corporate body feature in the livery. Alternatively, some kind of a personal emblem or badge, or a distinctive colour, is featured.

Yeomen of the Guard processing to St George's Chapel, Windsor for the annual service of the Order of the Garter in 2006

The word itself derives from the French livrée, meaning dispensed, handed over. Most often it would indicate that the wearer of the livery was a servant, dependant, follower or friend of the owner of the livery, or, in the case of objects, that the object belonged to them.

In the late medieval phenomenon of bastard feudalism, livery badges worn by the "retainers" of great lords, sometimes in effect private armies, became a great political concern in England.[citation needed]

Etymology

"In the Black Book of 1483, it was laid down that each person should receive "... for his Livery at night, half a chet loaf, one quart of wine. one gallon of ale; and for Winter livery...one percher wax, one candle wax...""[1]

"Edmund Spenser noted in 1596 that "... the liverye is sayd to be served up all night, that is theyr nyghtes allowances of drinks...""[1][2]

In the early inventories of households, in the chambers there are a large number of "Livery Cupboards" recorded, presumably used for storing the Livery.

During the 12th century, specific colours denoting a great person began to be used for both his soldiers and his civilian followers (the two often overlapped considerably), and the modern sense of the term began to form. Usually two different colours were used together (and often with a device or badge sewn on), but the ways in which they were combined varied with rank. Often the colours used were different each year.[citation needed] In addition to embroidered badges, metal ones were sewn on to clothing, or hung on neck-chains or (by far the most prestigious) livery collars. From the 16th century onwards, only the lower-status followers tended to receive clothes in livery colours (whilst the higher status ones received cash) and the term "servant", previously much wider, also began to be restricted to describing the same people. Municipalities and corporations copied the behaviour of the great households.[3]

The term is also used to describe badges, buttons[4][5] and grander pieces of jewellery containing the heraldic signs of an individual, which were given by that person to friends, followers and distinguished visitors, as well as (in more modest forms) servants. The grandest of these is the livery collar. William, Lord Hastings the favourite of King Edward IV of England had a "Coller of gold of K. Edward's lyverys" valued at the enormous sum of £40 in an inventory of 1489. This would have been similar to the collars worn by Hastings' sister and her husband Sir John Donne in the Donne Triptych by Hans Memling (described in Sir John Donne).[6] Lords gave their servants lead or pewter badges to sew onto their clothes.[7] In the 15th century European royalty sometimes distributed uniform suits of clothes to courtiers, as the House of Fugger, the leading bankers, did to all employees.[8]

 
Footman c. 1780 in braided livery

This practice later contracted to the provision of standardized clothing to male servants, often in a colour-scheme distinctive to a particular family. The term most notably referred to the embroidered coats, waistcoats, knee breeches and stockings in 18th-century style, worn by footmen on formal occasions in grand houses. Plainer clothing in dark colours and without braiding was worn by footmen, chauffeurs and other employees for ordinary duties. For financial reasons, the employment of such servants, and their expensive dress, died out after World War I except in royal households.[9]

Livery at European courts

 
State livery at the Dutch court
 
Belgian court livery c. 1960

Most European royal courts still use their state liveries on formal occasions. These are generally in traditional national colours, and are based on 18th-century clothing with fine gold embroidery. Only male royal servants normally wear livery. Knee breeches are worn, normally with white silk stockings; one exception being the Spanish court which prescribes red.[10]

United Kingdom

At the British royal court, scarlet state livery is still worn by footmen, coachmen and other attendants on state occasions. The full-dress scarlet coats are handmade, and embroidered in gold braid with the royal cypher of the monarch. Gold buttons and other trimmings are of designs and patterns which date from the 18th century, and the full state dress worn by footmen includes scarlet breeches, stockings and a sword. On other formal occasions, a 'semi-state' dress is worn: a scarlet tail coat, black trousers and a white stiff shirt and bow tie. Normal day-to-day dress (as worn by footmen on duty in the palace, except on special occasions) consists of a black tail coat and trousers, white shirt and black tie and a scarlet waistcoat with gold trimming.[11] Pages wear similar daily, semi-state and (very occasionally) state liveries, but in dark blue rather than scarlet. The uniform clothing issued to full-time royal staff is tailor-made, but the seldom-worn full-state dress is not bespoke; the usual practice is to select individuals whose height fits the existing ceremonial coats held in storage.[12]

Pages of Honour to the king wear scarlet (or, in Scotland, green) frock coats with blue velvet cuffs, edged all round with gold lace, with white breeches and hose, a short sword and other accoutrements.[13]

Scarlet is the livery colour of the sovereign and of the royal court. Elizabeth II also had a family livery colour, however, known as 'Edinburgh Green', which she and the Duke of Edinburgh chose in the year of their marriage, 1948. Five years later, at her coronation, while the Queen's attendants wore scarlet the page in attendance on the Duke wore a green livery edged in silver. Subsequently, Edinburgh green became the colour used for their private cars and carriages (whereas the official vehicles are painted in a royal livery colour of maroon (or 'claret') and black).[14]

Belgium

At the Belgian court liveries in traditional colours are still used at state occasions. The coats are red, and have black cuffs with golden lace. Royal cyphers are embroidered on the shoulders. The breeches are of yellow fabric. The semi-state livery worn for less formal occasions has black breeches.[15]

The Netherlands

At the Dutch court the full state livery is blue (nassaublauw). The breeches are yellow, and cuffs are red.

Sue one's livery

The phrase "to sue one's livery" refers to the formal recognition of a noble's majority, in exchange of payment, for conferring the powers attached to his title, and thereby freeing him from dependence as a ward.[16]

Modern usage

 
Royal livery of claret and black, as used on state cars and carriages in the UK
 
An Estonian ambulance and police van in Tallinn, displaying their respective fleet liveries
 
Transilien rolling stock livery in Paris, design by the French agency RCP Design Global
 
Porsche 935 in iconic Martini Racing livery

From this core meaning, multiple extended or specialist meanings have derived, mostly related to exterior graphic designs on vehicles. Examples include:

  • A livery company is the name used for a guild in the City of London; members of the company were allowed to dress their servants in the distinctive uniform of their trade, and the company's charters enabled them to prevent others from embarking upon the trades within the company's jurisdiction.
  • A fleet livery is the common design and paint scheme a business or organization uses on its fleet vehicles, often using specific colors and logo placement. For example, the United Parcel Service has trucks with a well-known brown livery. This may sometimes used alongside wrap advertising. Fleet liveries can be used to promote a brand or for unrelated advertising compared to the goods contained in the vehicle. This can enable companies to become iconic as a result of their livery. An example is the truck fleet of Eddie Stobart Group, which has a deal with Corgi to sell replicas of their trucks with their unique red, green, and white livery.[17]
    • Fleet liveries are also used by emergency services to make emergency vehicles visually distinct from civilian traffic, allowing for higher visibility and easy identification. Depending on the policies of the agency and the scope of its jurisdiction, the livery used by an emergency vehicle fleet may be the same or similar across a municipality, region, or entire country; alternatively, they may differ in each municipality or region, under each agency, or even depending on the vehicle's assigned purpose. Examples of markings and designs used in emergency vehicle liveries include black and white, Battenburg markings, Sillitoe tartan, "jam sandwich" markings, and reflective decals.
  • A racing livery is the specific paint scheme and sticker design used in motorsport, on vehicles, in order to attract sponsorship and to advertise sponsors, as well as to identify vehicles as belonging to a specific racing team.
  • Aircraft livery is also the term describing the paint scheme of an aircraft. Most airlines have a standard paint scheme for their aircraft fleet, usually prominently displaying the airline logo or name. From time to time special liveries are introduced, for example prior to big events.
  • A "livery vehicle" remains a legal term of art in the U.S. and Canada for a vehicle for hire, such as a taxicab or chauffeured limousine, but excluding a rented vehicle driven by the renter. In some jurisdictions a "livery vehicle" covers vehicles that carry up to fifteen passengers, but not more, thus including a jitney but excluding an omnibus or motorcoach. This usage stems from the hackney cabs or coaches that could be provided by a livery stable. By extension, there are boat livery companies for the hire of watercraft. Canada has many businesses offering canoe livery.
  • A livery stable (from 1705, derived from the obsolete sense of "provender for horses" found in the mid-15th century)[18] looks after the care, feeding, stabling, etc., of horses for pay.

Historical military usage

The term "livery" is now rarely applied in a military context, so it would be unusual for it to refer to a military uniform or the painting design of a military vehicle. The modern military equivalent for "livery" is the term "standard issue", which is used when referring to the colors and regulations required in respect of any military clothing or equipment.

Early uniforms were however regarded as a form of livery ("the King's coat") during the late 17th and early 18th centuries in the European monarchies.[19] During this period, officers of the French Garde du Corps (the Royal Bodyguard) successfully petitioned not be required to wear uniforms while on duty within the palace at Versailles, since this livery suggested that they were servants rather than aristocrats.

Further reading

  • Rogers Peet & Co, Outfitters, Livery, New York, 1898 [1] (treatise on clothing styles of various grades of domestic servants)

References

  1. ^ a b Chinnery, Victor. Oak Furniture: The British Tradition.
  2. ^ Spenser, Edmund (1596). View of the State of Ireland.
  3. ^ Françoise Piponnier and Perrine Mane; Dress in the Middle Ages; pp. 133-5, Yale UP, 1997; ISBN 0-300-06906-5.
  4. ^ Tin-glazed earthenware livery-button, ca 1651, Victoria & Albert museum jewellery collection
  5. ^ Close, Lesley (2009). "Button gallery: livery". Hammond Turner & Sons Birmingham button makers. Hammond Turner & Sons. Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  6. ^ National Gallery Catalogues: The Fifteenth Century Netherlandish Paintings by Lorne Campbell, 1998, ISBN 1-85709-171-X - Hastings' collar p389 n88
  7. ^ Jonathan Alexander & Paul Binski (eds), Age of Chivalry, Art in Plantagenet England, 1200-1400, Royal Academy/Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London 1987, Cat 448; see also Steane, John, The Archaeology of the Medieval English Monarchy, Routledge, 1999, ISBN 0-415-19788-0, ISBN 978-0-415-19788-5
  8. ^ Georges Duby ed., A History of Private Life, Vol 2 Revelations of the Medieval World, 1988 (English translation), p. 578, Belknap Press, Harvard University
  9. ^ "Except at public functions, the last time I saw a footman in livery was in 1921": George Orwell writing in the Tribune of 3 March 1944
  10. ^ "Panoramio - Photo of Acto de presentacion de cartas credenciales en Madrid de los nuevos Embajadores". www.panoramio.com. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  11. ^ Allison, Ronald; Riddell, Sarah, eds. (1991). The Royal Encyclopedia. London: Macmillan. pp. 313–314.
  12. ^ "Permanent Style". Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  13. ^ "Dress and insignia worn at His Majesty's court, issued with the authority of the lord chamberlain". Archive.org. Retrieved 2016-03-30.
  14. ^ Allison, Ronald; Riddell, Sarah, eds. (1991). The Royal Encyclopedia. London: Macmillan. p. 153.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-10-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  16. ^ Nelson, Alan H. (2003). Monstrous Adversary: The Life of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. Liverpool University Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-85323-678-8.
  17. ^ CORGI Eddie Stobart Curtainside Truck. Image of die-cast, 1:64 scale model of Stobart including authentic livery.
  18. ^ Harper, Douglas. "livery". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2015-01-03.
  19. ^ Mollo, John (1972). Military Fashion. p. 30. ISBN 0-214-65349-8.

livery, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schola. For other uses see Livery disambiguation 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 Livery news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message A livery ˈ l ɪ v er i is an identifying design such as a uniform ornament symbol or insignia that designates ownership or affiliation often found on an individual or vehicle Livery often includes elements of the heraldry relating to the individual or corporate body feature in the livery Alternatively some kind of a personal emblem or badge or a distinctive colour is featured Yeomen of the Guard processing to St George s Chapel Windsor for the annual service of the Order of the Garter in 2006 The word itself derives from the French livree meaning dispensed handed over Most often it would indicate that the wearer of the livery was a servant dependant follower or friend of the owner of the livery or in the case of objects that the object belonged to them In the late medieval phenomenon of bastard feudalism livery badges worn by the retainers of great lords sometimes in effect private armies became a great political concern in England citation needed Contents 1 Etymology 2 Livery at European courts 2 1 United Kingdom 2 2 Belgium 2 3 The Netherlands 3 Sue one s livery 4 Modern usage 5 Historical military usage 6 Further reading 7 ReferencesEtymology Edit In the Black Book of 1483 it was laid down that each person should receive for his Livery at night half a chet loaf one quart of wine one gallon of ale and for Winter livery one percher wax one candle wax 1 Edmund Spenser noted in 1596 that the liverye is sayd to be served up all night that is theyr nyghtes allowances of drinks 1 2 In the early inventories of households in the chambers there are a large number of Livery Cupboards recorded presumably used for storing the Livery During the 12th century specific colours denoting a great person began to be used for both his soldiers and his civilian followers the two often overlapped considerably and the modern sense of the term began to form Usually two different colours were used together and often with a device or badge sewn on but the ways in which they were combined varied with rank Often the colours used were different each year citation needed In addition to embroidered badges metal ones were sewn on to clothing or hung on neck chains or by far the most prestigious livery collars From the 16th century onwards only the lower status followers tended to receive clothes in livery colours whilst the higher status ones received cash and the term servant previously much wider also began to be restricted to describing the same people Municipalities and corporations copied the behaviour of the great households 3 The term is also used to describe badges buttons 4 5 and grander pieces of jewellery containing the heraldic signs of an individual which were given by that person to friends followers and distinguished visitors as well as in more modest forms servants The grandest of these is the livery collar William Lord Hastings the favourite of King Edward IV of England had a Coller of gold of K Edward s lyverys valued at the enormous sum of 40 in an inventory of 1489 This would have been similar to the collars worn by Hastings sister and her husband Sir John Donne in the Donne Triptych by Hans Memling described in Sir John Donne 6 Lords gave their servants lead or pewter badges to sew onto their clothes 7 In the 15th century European royalty sometimes distributed uniform suits of clothes to courtiers as the House of Fugger the leading bankers did to all employees 8 Footman c 1780 in braided livery This practice later contracted to the provision of standardized clothing to male servants often in a colour scheme distinctive to a particular family The term most notably referred to the embroidered coats waistcoats knee breeches and stockings in 18th century style worn by footmen on formal occasions in grand houses Plainer clothing in dark colours and without braiding was worn by footmen chauffeurs and other employees for ordinary duties For financial reasons the employment of such servants and their expensive dress died out after World War I except in royal households 9 Livery at European courts Edit State livery at the Dutch court Belgian court livery c 1960 Most European royal courts still use their state liveries on formal occasions These are generally in traditional national colours and are based on 18th century clothing with fine gold embroidery Only male royal servants normally wear livery Knee breeches are worn normally with white silk stockings one exception being the Spanish court which prescribes red 10 United Kingdom Edit At the British royal court scarlet state livery is still worn by footmen coachmen and other attendants on state occasions The full dress scarlet coats are handmade and embroidered in gold braid with the royal cypher of the monarch Gold buttons and other trimmings are of designs and patterns which date from the 18th century and the full state dress worn by footmen includes scarlet breeches stockings and a sword On other formal occasions a semi state dress is worn a scarlet tail coat black trousers and a white stiff shirt and bow tie Normal day to day dress as worn by footmen on duty in the palace except on special occasions consists of a black tail coat and trousers white shirt and black tie and a scarlet waistcoat with gold trimming 11 Pages wear similar daily semi state and very occasionally state liveries but in dark blue rather than scarlet The uniform clothing issued to full time royal staff is tailor made but the seldom worn full state dress is not bespoke the usual practice is to select individuals whose height fits the existing ceremonial coats held in storage 12 Pages of Honour to the king wear scarlet or in Scotland green frock coats with blue velvet cuffs edged all round with gold lace with white breeches and hose a short sword and other accoutrements 13 Scarlet is the livery colour of the sovereign and of the royal court Elizabeth II also had a family livery colour however known as Edinburgh Green which she and the Duke of Edinburgh chose in the year of their marriage 1948 Five years later at her coronation while the Queen s attendants wore scarlet the page in attendance on the Duke wore a green livery edged in silver Subsequently Edinburgh green became the colour used for their private cars and carriages whereas the official vehicles are painted in a royal livery colour of maroon or claret and black 14 Coachman and footmen in state livery for the State Opening of Parliament Coachman and footmen in semi state livery for the Queen s Birthday Parade Outriders from the Royal Mews wearing scarlet livery The Duke of Edinburgh driving an Edinburgh Green carriageBelgium Edit At the Belgian court liveries in traditional colours are still used at state occasions The coats are red and have black cuffs with golden lace Royal cyphers are embroidered on the shoulders The breeches are of yellow fabric The semi state livery worn for less formal occasions has black breeches 15 The Netherlands Edit At the Dutch court the full state livery is blue nassaublauw The breeches are yellow and cuffs are red Sue one s livery EditFurther information Livery of seisin Inquisitions post mortem and livery of seisin The phrase to sue one s livery refers to the formal recognition of a noble s majority in exchange of payment for conferring the powers attached to his title and thereby freeing him from dependence as a ward 16 Modern usage Edit Royal livery of claret and black as used on state cars and carriages in the UK New York City taxicab in mandated yellow taxi cab livery An Estonian ambulance and police van in Tallinn displaying their respective fleet liveries Transilien rolling stock livery in Paris design by the French agency RCP Design Global Porsche 935 in iconic Martini Racing liveryFrom this core meaning multiple extended or specialist meanings have derived mostly related to exterior graphic designs on vehicles Examples include A livery company is the name used for a guild in the City of London members of the company were allowed to dress their servants in the distinctive uniform of their trade and the company s charters enabled them to prevent others from embarking upon the trades within the company s jurisdiction A fleet livery is the common design and paint scheme a business or organization uses on its fleet vehicles often using specific colors and logo placement For example the United Parcel Service has trucks with a well known brown livery This may sometimes used alongside wrap advertising Fleet liveries can be used to promote a brand or for unrelated advertising compared to the goods contained in the vehicle This can enable companies to become iconic as a result of their livery An example is the truck fleet of Eddie Stobart Group which has a deal with Corgi to sell replicas of their trucks with their unique red green and white livery 17 Fleet liveries are also used by emergency services to make emergency vehicles visually distinct from civilian traffic allowing for higher visibility and easy identification Depending on the policies of the agency and the scope of its jurisdiction the livery used by an emergency vehicle fleet may be the same or similar across a municipality region or entire country alternatively they may differ in each municipality or region under each agency or even depending on the vehicle s assigned purpose Examples of markings and designs used in emergency vehicle liveries include black and white Battenburg markings Sillitoe tartan jam sandwich markings and reflective decals A racing livery is the specific paint scheme and sticker design used in motorsport on vehicles in order to attract sponsorship and to advertise sponsors as well as to identify vehicles as belonging to a specific racing team Aircraft livery is also the term describing the paint scheme of an aircraft Most airlines have a standard paint scheme for their aircraft fleet usually prominently displaying the airline logo or name From time to time special liveries are introduced for example prior to big events A livery vehicle remains a legal term of art in the U S and Canada for a vehicle for hire such as a taxicab or chauffeured limousine but excluding a rented vehicle driven by the renter In some jurisdictions a livery vehicle covers vehicles that carry up to fifteen passengers but not more thus including a jitney but excluding an omnibus or motorcoach This usage stems from the hackney cabs or coaches that could be provided by a livery stable By extension there are boat livery companies for the hire of watercraft Canada has many businesses offering canoe livery A livery stable from 1705 derived from the obsolete sense of provender for horses found in the mid 15th century 18 looks after the care feeding stabling etc of horses for pay Historical military usage EditThe term livery is now rarely applied in a military context so it would be unusual for it to refer to a military uniform or the painting design of a military vehicle The modern military equivalent for livery is the term standard issue which is used when referring to the colors and regulations required in respect of any military clothing or equipment Early uniforms were however regarded as a form of livery the King s coat during the late 17th and early 18th centuries in the European monarchies 19 During this period officers of the French Garde du Corps the Royal Bodyguard successfully petitioned not be required to wear uniforms while on duty within the palace at Versailles since this livery suggested that they were servants rather than aristocrats Further reading EditRogers Peet amp Co Outfitters Livery New York 1898 1 treatise on clothing styles of various grades of domestic servants References Edit Look up livery in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Livery clothing a b Chinnery Victor Oak Furniture The British Tradition Spenser Edmund 1596 View of the State of Ireland Francoise Piponnier and Perrine Mane Dress in the Middle Ages pp 133 5 Yale UP 1997 ISBN 0 300 06906 5 Tin glazed earthenware livery button ca 1651 Victoria amp Albert museum jewellery collection Close Lesley 2009 Button gallery livery Hammond Turner amp Sons Birmingham button makers Hammond Turner amp Sons Retrieved 18 March 2010 National Gallery Catalogues The Fifteenth Century Netherlandish Paintings by Lorne Campbell 1998 ISBN 1 85709 171 X Hastings collar p389 n88 Jonathan Alexander amp Paul Binski eds Age of Chivalry Art in Plantagenet England 1200 1400 Royal Academy Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London 1987 Cat 448 see also Steane John The Archaeology of the Medieval English Monarchy Routledge 1999 ISBN 0 415 19788 0 ISBN 978 0 415 19788 5 Georges Duby ed A History of Private Life Vol 2 Revelations of the Medieval World 1988 English translation p 578 Belknap Press Harvard University Except at public functions the last time I saw a footman in livery was in 1921 George Orwell writing in the Tribune of 3 March 1944 Panoramio Photo of Acto de presentacion de cartas credenciales en Madrid de los nuevos Embajadores www panoramio com Retrieved 21 January 2018 Allison Ronald Riddell Sarah eds 1991 The Royal Encyclopedia London Macmillan pp 313 314 Permanent Style Retrieved 21 January 2018 Dress and insignia worn at His Majesty s court issued with the authority of the lord chamberlain Archive org Retrieved 2016 03 30 Allison Ronald Riddell Sarah eds 1991 The Royal Encyclopedia London Macmillan p 153 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 10 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Nelson Alan H 2003 Monstrous Adversary The Life of Edward de Vere 17th Earl of Oxford Liverpool University Press p 71 ISBN 978 0 85323 678 8 CORGI Eddie Stobart Curtainside Truck Image of die cast 1 64 scale model of Stobart including authentic livery Harper Douglas livery Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2015 01 03 Mollo John 1972 Military Fashion p 30 ISBN 0 214 65349 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Livery amp oldid 1132865247, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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