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{{Short description|Type of hood with a trailing point}}
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[[Image:Gugel.PNG|thumb|Gugel]]
[[Image:Gugel.PNG|thumb|Gugel]]


A '''gugel''' was a type of [[hood (headgear)|hood]] with a
A '''gugel''' was a type of [[hood (headgear)|hood]] with a trailing point, popularly worn in medieval [[Germany]].
trailing point, popularly worn in medieval [[Germany]].


==Description==
KUK
It was tailored to fit the head and shoulders and was usually made from wool or [[loden cape|loden]]. Originally worn by commoners, it became fashionable with the nobility from the 14th century. In the fashionable style, the gugel was worn on top of the head like a hat, with the head part inverted inside the collar, which then hung over the ears.


==Distribution==
IMAHACKERNOOBS
From about 1360, this style of gugel was also worn outside Germany, being called a ''[[Chaperon (headgear)|chaperon]]'' in [[France]] and a ''cappucio'' in [[Italy]]. By about 1400 the trailing point was sometimes of enormous proportions.


==See also==
==See also==
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==References==
==References==
* [[:de:Gugel (Kleidung)|Gugel]] in the German-language Wikipedia. Retrieved 9 May 2015. Includes pictures
* [[:de:Gugel (Kleidung)|Gugel]] in the German-language Wikipedia. Retrieved 9 May 2015. Includes pictures{{circular reference|date=October 2022}}

{{clothing-stub}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Hoods (headgear)]]
[[Category:Hoods (headgear)]]
[[Category:Medieval European costume]]


{{clothing-hist-stub}}

Latest revision as of 05:00, 17 March 2024

Gugel

A gugel was a type of hood with a trailing point, popularly worn in medieval Germany.

Description

[edit]

It was tailored to fit the head and shoulders and was usually made from wool or loden. Originally worn by commoners, it became fashionable with the nobility from the 14th century. In the fashionable style, the gugel was worn on top of the head like a hat, with the head part inverted inside the collar, which then hung over the ears.

Distribution

[edit]

From about 1360, this style of gugel was also worn outside Germany, being called a chaperon in France and a cappucio in Italy. By about 1400 the trailing point was sometimes of enormous proportions.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]