Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Academic dress (18)
- Hood (6)
- Academic cap and gown (4)
- Academical dress (4)
- History of academic dress (4)
-
- Origins of university costume (4)
- Gown (3)
- Oxford (3)
- Cap (2)
- Charles Franklyn (2)
- Covid (2)
- Table of contents (2)
- University of Cambridge (2)
- University of Edinburgh (2)
- University of Glasgow (2)
- University of Oxford (2)
- Academic attire (1)
- Academic dress; doctoral dress; Aotearoa; New Zealand (1)
- Academic hood (1)
- Al-Azhar University (1)
- Albert Sloman (1)
- Alexandria University (1)
- American University in Cairo (1)
- Aotearoa (1)
- BA (1)
- BA hood (1)
- Benefactor’s gown (1)
- Bogazici University (1)
- Bonnet (1)
- Bosphorus University (1)
Articles 31 - 40 of 40
Full-Text Articles in Education
An Inside Job: Reflections On Designs Of Academical And Official Dress For The University Of The Arts London, Philip Goff
An Inside Job: Reflections On Designs Of Academical And Official Dress For The University Of The Arts London, Philip Goff
Transactions of the Burgon Society
No abstract provided.
‘Apprpriate Hoods’: The Development Of Academic Dress At Nashotah House Theological Seminary, Stephen A. Peay
‘Apprpriate Hoods’: The Development Of Academic Dress At Nashotah House Theological Seminary, Stephen A. Peay
Transactions of the Burgon Society
No abstract provided.
Egregii Procuratores: The Master Of Arts’ Full-Dress Gown And Its Use By The Proctors And Assessor Of The University Of Oxford, Edmund Eggleston
Egregii Procuratores: The Master Of Arts’ Full-Dress Gown And Its Use By The Proctors And Assessor Of The University Of Oxford, Edmund Eggleston
Transactions of the Burgon Society
No abstract provided.
The Academic Dress Of The University Of Essex, Edmund Eggleston
The Academic Dress Of The University Of Essex, Edmund Eggleston
Transactions of the Burgon Society
No abstract provided.
The Hood Of The Determining Ba At Oxford, Nicholas Groves
The Hood Of The Determining Ba At Oxford, Nicholas Groves
Transactions of the Burgon Society
No abstract provided.
An Argument For The Wider Adoption And Use Of Traditional Academic Attire Within Roman Catholic Church Services, Seamus Addison Hargrave
An Argument For The Wider Adoption And Use Of Traditional Academic Attire Within Roman Catholic Church Services, Seamus Addison Hargrave
Transactions of the Burgon Society
No abstract provided.
Glasgow Gown With Three Bands On Each Sleeve, Neil K. Dickson
Glasgow Gown With Three Bands On Each Sleeve, Neil K. Dickson
Transactions of the Burgon Society
In my history of the academic dress of the University of Glasgow I recorded that major changes to gowns and hoods took place in 1893. When the proposals for the various degrees were under consideration by a committee, the University Court instructed the committee to design a gown for its members. However no design appeared. In 1901 a new committee was appointed with the result that in 1902 the following design was approved: ‘a black doctor’s gown with collar and yoke and faced all with MA silk and with three bands of MA silk on each sleeve’. [Excerpt].
Tradition And Humour: The Academic Dress Of The University Of Glasgow, Neil K. Dickson
Tradition And Humour: The Academic Dress Of The University Of Glasgow, Neil K. Dickson
Transactions of the Burgon Society
The University of Glasgow was founded in 1451. It is the second oldest university in Scotland and the fourth oldest in the UK (after Oxford, Cambridge and St Andrews). By the end of the sixteenth century Scotland had five universities, compared with England’s two. This situation continued for more than two hundred years: it was only in the nineteenth century that England finally caught up with Scotland. So perhaps one might expect that Scotland would have a long, continuous and colourful history of academic dress. However, as we shall see, that is not the case. The reason can be expressed …
A Dress Without A Home: The Unadopted Academic Dress Of The Royal Institute Of British Architects, 1923–24, Philip Goff
A Dress Without A Home: The Unadopted Academic Dress Of The Royal Institute Of British Architects, 1923–24, Philip Goff
Transactions of the Burgon Society
Following the death of Bill Keen, the Managing Director of Ede & Ravenscroft, in 1996, one of [Goff's] tasks, as Academic Consultant, was to sift through hundreds of files and letters at the Chancery Lane premises. On one occasion, a yellowing, quarto-size page fell out of a book. It was headed Supplement to the Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and the bold title of the piece caught his eye: ‘Proposals for the Adoption of an Academic Dress for Members and Licentiates of the Royal Institute of British Architects’. This was followed by some illustrations of the costume …
Academical Dress In The University Of Westminster, Philip Goff
Academical Dress In The University Of Westminster, Philip Goff
Transactions of the Burgon Society
The following is the account of how the system of academical dress came into being, beginning with what Dr Avery wrote on the subject in his report to the Polytechnic of Central London Court of Governors’ sub-committee on university status, on 16 December 1991. [Excerpt].