Jerry is correct, there are a number of these caps depicted in the 1943 film The life and death of Colonel Blimp, I was racking my brain where I had seen these type caps before and low and behold I'm watching the film as I type
Jerry is correct, there are a number of these caps depicted in the 1943 film The life and death of Colonel Blimp, I was racking my brain where I had seen these type caps before and low and behold I'm watching the film as I type
“Show me the regulation, and I’ll show you the exception.”
Id love to see some more shots of that killer green one! The hats themselves are kinda ugly but we all know how I do love that lime green color. Matt
Very nice, Ben. I had one of these made for myself in Vienna in 1973 out of velvet without, however, the colors of the fraternity. I have no idea what happened to it. I think I later sold it.
This is my dogma and doctrine well said by Ben. Student life reaching back to the middle ages was an important feature of especially bourgeois society for which university study enabled a life in the professions, lawyers, doctors, higher officials of the state and so on. The dueling fraternity and the Mensur formed a rite of male passage, proof of virility and honor in its bourgeois incarnation. The bourgeois was unwanted in the most elite regiments, where the nobility nourished their own sense of honor and manly strength in which affairs of honor were also noteworthy.
Today in Germany and Austria such things are suspect, especially in Austria, where the dueling fraternities are associated with the radical right wing. Such fraternities, however, were suppressed by the Nazis as class laden.
Der Untertan - Mensur - YouTube
The film I enclose is an East German critique of this custom from the famous novel of Heinrich Mann, Der Untertan, a withering critique of bourgeois and middle class ills in the Wilhelmine era.
Very interesting!
Bravo my Friend !
Very nice cap. I like it (and all the others shown in the thread)
A custom very similar to the Danish (and the Norwegians and Swedes) still very much alive today. The Danish custom of wearing a student cap, originates from 1856, and the cap were a way of telling university students apart from the "others". The current version (still in use today - 2013) is the version from the 1880s.
When I graduated I had the privilege to wear a "student cap" (Danish: Studenterhue) for the duration of my summer vacation before I began at university, back in the day, many wore it for the entire length of their study. Mine proudly resides on the mantelpiece
This is how it looks today: (as in the 1880s)
There is a small collecting scene in these hats and related items, it is called Studentika. There are some fobs which will have ribbons in the student colors, they are often hocked off as military.I have seen SA fobs and military fobs, they are the same construction as the studentika ones.
On a humorous not, imagine the studentika scene has forums and they brag about scoring the grouping of the top of the physics class in 1902 , similar to when one of us gets an RK grouping. Or someone breaks up the grouping of the 1882 top of the class student and he gets ran through the mud lol.
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