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  2. Beret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beret

    Among a few well-known historic examples are the Scottish soldiers, who wore the blue bonnet in the 17th and 18th centuries, the Volontaires Cantabres, a French force raised in the Basque country in the 1740s to the 1760s, who also wore a blue beret, and the Carlist rebels, with their red berets, in 1830s Spain.

  3. Coppola cap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coppola_cap

    Coppola caps. The coppola (Italian pronunciation:) is a traditional kind of flat cap typically worn in Sicily, Campania and Calabria, where is it known as còppula or berretto, and also seen in Malta, Greece (where it is known as tragiáska, Greek: τραγιάσκα), some territories in Turkey, Corsica, and Sardinia (where it came to be known, in the local language, as berritta, cicía, and ...

  4. Tam o' shanter (cap) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tam_o'_shanter_(cap)

    Statue of Burns wearing a tam o' shanter. The tam o' shanter is a flat bonnet, originally made of wool hand-knitted in one piece, stretched on a wooden disc to give the distinctive flat shape, and subsequently felted. [1] The earliest forms of these caps, known as a blue bonnet from their typical colour, were made by bonnet-makers in Scotland.

  5. Bycocket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bycocket

    Bycocket. A bycocket or bycoket is a style of hat that was fashionable for both men and women in Western Europe from the 13th to the 16th century. [1][2] It has a wide brim that is turned up in the back and pointed in the front like a bird's beak. [3] In French, it is called a chapeau à bec due to this resemblance.

  6. Blue bonnet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_bonnet_(hat)

    The blue bonnet was a type of soft woollen hat that for several hundred years was the customary working wear of Scottish labourers and farmers. Although a particularly broad and flat form was associated with the Scottish Lowlands, where it was sometimes called the scone cap, [1] the bonnet was also worn in parts of Northern England and became ...

  7. Square academic cap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_academic_cap

    The biretta itself may have been a development of the Roman pileus quadratus, a type of skullcap with superposed square and tump (meaning small mound). A reinvention of this type of cap is known as the Bishop Andrewes cap .

  8. Tricorne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tricorne

    Tricorne. The tricorne or tricorn is a style of hat that was popular during the 18th century, falling out of style by the early 1800s, though not called a "tricorne" until the mid-19th century. During the 18th century, hats of this general style were referred to as "cocked hats". At the peak of its popularity, the tricorne varied greatly in ...

  9. Bonnet (headgear) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonnet_(headgear)

    Other types of bonnet might otherwise be called "caps", for example the Scottish blue bonnet worn by working-class men and women, a kind of large floppy beret. Bonnet derives from the same word in French, where it originally indicated a type of material. From the 18th century bonnet forms of headgear, previously mostly worn by elite women in ...