Academical dress enthusiasts have observed—with a mixture of sadness and consternation—the decline of academical costume during the last several decades. There can be little doubt that academical dress is now absent from such settings as grammar schools and university lecture theatres, where it was once regarded as the norm. For many, academical costume is regarded simply as an historical curiosity, the somewhat bizarre attire that garnishes the graduation day with the quintessential trappings of medieval English ceremonial. Despite this, special interest groups have emerged with the intention of promoting the wearing of academical costume over and above its use in graduation ceremonial, both on a national and local basis. These groups, whi...
The talk given at the Burgon Society’s Congregation in October 2005 on which this paper is based was...
Writers on the history of academic dress sometimes mistake which medieval garments were the antecede...
Throughout the ‘long’ eighteenth century undergraduates at Oxford and Cambridge were differentiated ...
One might expect that the well-trodden ground of Oxford academic dress would yield nothing new or su...
The aim of this article is to examine the developments in the academic dress of the graduates of the...
‘It is typical of the growth of specialized costume that a fashion abandoned in everyday life is app...
This paper charts the development of the distinctive academic costume worn by undergraduate members ...
There are a number of scholars tracing the labyrinthian turns that the history of academic dress has...
Academic dress is perceived by many to be fixed and unchanging, yet this study illuminated how rich,...
Academical dress in New Zealand generally follows the traditional Cambridge pattern. Apart from the ...
This paper will consider the higher education sector then and now and will give a summary of the pre...
Academic dress in the United States of America began after the foundation of the colonial colleges. ...
Academic dress in medieval English universities was quite strictly regulated and evolution was gradu...
This note is based upon the observation that the academic dress (AD) adopted by (former) British col...
The new Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, published to great acclaim in 2004, contains over 5...
The talk given at the Burgon Society’s Congregation in October 2005 on which this paper is based was...
Writers on the history of academic dress sometimes mistake which medieval garments were the antecede...
Throughout the ‘long’ eighteenth century undergraduates at Oxford and Cambridge were differentiated ...
One might expect that the well-trodden ground of Oxford academic dress would yield nothing new or su...
The aim of this article is to examine the developments in the academic dress of the graduates of the...
‘It is typical of the growth of specialized costume that a fashion abandoned in everyday life is app...
This paper charts the development of the distinctive academic costume worn by undergraduate members ...
There are a number of scholars tracing the labyrinthian turns that the history of academic dress has...
Academic dress is perceived by many to be fixed and unchanging, yet this study illuminated how rich,...
Academical dress in New Zealand generally follows the traditional Cambridge pattern. Apart from the ...
This paper will consider the higher education sector then and now and will give a summary of the pre...
Academic dress in the United States of America began after the foundation of the colonial colleges. ...
Academic dress in medieval English universities was quite strictly regulated and evolution was gradu...
This note is based upon the observation that the academic dress (AD) adopted by (former) British col...
The new Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, published to great acclaim in 2004, contains over 5...
The talk given at the Burgon Society’s Congregation in October 2005 on which this paper is based was...
Writers on the history of academic dress sometimes mistake which medieval garments were the antecede...
Throughout the ‘long’ eighteenth century undergraduates at Oxford and Cambridge were differentiated ...