Pileus (hat)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The pileus (plural, pilei), also pilleus or pilleum, was, in Ancient Greece and Rome, a brimless, felt cap, somewhat similar to a fez. (The pilleolus was a smaller cap, similar to a skullcap.) It was especially associated with the manumission of slaves who wore it upon their liberation. The pileus became emblematic, especially popular in the 18th and 19th Centuries (when it was often called a “liberty cap” or Phrygian cap), of liberty and freedom from bondage, appearing on statuary and on heraldic devices.
[edit] History
In Ancient Rome, a slave was freed by a master in a ceremony that included placing the pileus on the former slave’s shaved head. (This was a form of extra-legal manumission [the manumissio minus justa] considered less legally sound than manumission in a court of law.)
One 19th century dictionary of classical antiquity states:
- Among the Romans the cap of felt was the emblem of liberty. When a slave obtained his freedom he had his head shaved, and wore instead of his hair an undyed pileus (πίλεον λευκόν, Diod. Sic. Exc. Leg. 22 p625, ed. Wess.; Plaut. Amphit. I.1.306; Persius, V.82). Hence the phrase servos ad pileum vocare is a summons to liberty, by which slaves were frequently called upon to take up arms with a promise of liberty (Liv. XXIV.32). The figure of Liberty on some of the coins of Antoninus Pius, struck A.D. 145, holds this cap in the right hand. [1]
[edit] References
- ^ Yates, James, Entry “Pileus”, in William Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, John Murray, London, 1875.
[edit] See also
- Phrygian cap, a type of pileus with a pointed top pulled forward
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.