doing some costume research i have found some illustration depicting bertrand du guesclin, dating from the early XVth century,showing him with very short cropped-shaved hairstyle. i was wondering if it was a common use durind the late middle age and if you could show me other examples in art.
thanks for help
this isn't late middle ages more early Renaissance, but I do remember that a number of landsknechts preferred the military style hair cut as you speak of.
England's King Henry V is often shown in period art with hair very short around the sides and back.
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Hairstyles seem to go in fashion cycles throughout the middle ages.
The Normans in the early 11thC favoured the short 'pudding basin' style. However, for most of the Middle Ages medium (collar) length hair seemed to be most common.
The 'pudding basin' haircut had a brief resurgence in the late 14th - early 15th centuries (see the images Chad has posted) before reverting to medium length again.
Medium length hair seems to have remained the norm until the second quarter of the 16th Century, when closer cropped (read: more like today's) hairstyles became the fashion.
The Normans in the early 11thC favoured the short 'pudding basin' style. However, for most of the Middle Ages medium (collar) length hair seemed to be most common.
The 'pudding basin' haircut had a brief resurgence in the late 14th - early 15th centuries (see the images Chad has posted) before reverting to medium length again.
Medium length hair seems to have remained the norm until the second quarter of the 16th Century, when closer cropped (read: more like today's) hairstyles became the fashion.
your comments are enterely correct, but if you take a look at the picture below Bertrand and some of the men on the foreground are depicted with the very short haircut tipical of the middle of the XVIth century:
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Here are examples of more or less the period. In the pages of deepening, there are other portraits.
Galleria degli Uffizi. Florence.
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galleria_degli_U...inquecento
images are to bottom
I hope this is helpful.:)
Ciao
Maurizio
Galleria degli Uffizi. Florence.
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galleria_degli_U...inquecento
images are to bottom
I hope this is helpful.:)
Ciao
Maurizio
Last edited by Maurizio D'Angelo on Sun 03 Jan, 2010 2:02 pm; edited 1 time in total
Interesting stuff; clearly I have to extend the definition of 'short hair' in the early XVth Century to include more than just the 'pudding basin'!
This subject came up about two years ago (or so) over at Armour Archive.
Turns out one short style of hair that shows up though out the middle ages is:
Cropped.
About 3 to 5 days worth of stubble.
If there was a common shape (such as the "pudding basin') the period art shows the basic shape of the style, just buzzed down to stubble.
Here is a late 15th century example
http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/g/ghirl...nfir3.html
Yes, even I rocked the "pudding basin' once for an event. :wtf:
Turns out one short style of hair that shows up though out the middle ages is:
Cropped.
About 3 to 5 days worth of stubble.
If there was a common shape (such as the "pudding basin') the period art shows the basic shape of the style, just buzzed down to stubble.
Here is a late 15th century example
http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/g/ghirl...nfir3.html
Yes, even I rocked the "pudding basin' once for an event. :wtf:
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