Notes and Queries, Number 21, March 23, 1850 by Various
page 40 of 69 (57%)
page 40 of 69 (57%)
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* * * * * BEAVER HATS. Permit me to suggest that, in asking a question, it is often desirable that the querist should state briefly the amount of information he already possesses on the subject. For instance, had Mr. "T.H. Turner," when inquiring after _beaver hats_ (No. 7. p. 100.), stated, that he had met with the mention of them as early as the time of Hen. III., I, of course, should not have troubled you with a notice of them in the reign of Elizabeth. Indeed, I owe Mr. Turner an apology; for if I had reflected a moment upon the extensive antiquarian information of the querist, I should certainly have concluded that he must be well acquainted with the authorities I cited, which happened to be at my elbow at the time I read the query. Mr. B. Corney (No. 19. p. 307.) has supplied a beaver hat from Chaucer's _Canterbury Tales_; we meet with another in his _Testament of Creseide_, v. 386., "in a mantill and a beaver hat." We may therefore conclude that they were not unusual in Chaucer's time. I now think it very probable that beaver hats were introduced into this country as early as the Norman Conquest; for we find mention of them in Normandy at a still earlier period. In the "Chronicle of the Abbey of St. Wandrille" (edited by Acheri, in his _Spicilegium_), we find, amongst the gifts of the Abbot Ansegisus, who died A.D. 833, "Cappas Romanas duas, unam videlicet ex rubeo cindato, et fimbriis viridibus in circuitu ornatam; alteram _ex cane Pontico_, quero vulgus _Bevurum_ nuncupat, similiter fimbriis sui coloris decoratam in orbe." |
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