Lock of hair

A hair wreath from the 19th-century with a lock of hair in the center, in the collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

A lock of hair is a piece or pieces of hair that has been cut from, or remains singly on, a human head, most commonly bunched or tied together in some way. A standard dictionary definition defines a lock as a tress, curl, or ringlet of hair (dictionary.com).

Symbolic value

Preserved locks of the hair of Percy and Mary Shelley, now in the British Library.

Locks of hair carry symbolic value and have been utilized throughout history in various religious, superstitious, and sentimental roles.

Sources

See also

Notes

  1. The Innocents Abroad, or The New Pilgrims' Progress, Mark Twain, 1869
  2. El Maghreg: 1200 Miles' Ride Through Morocco, Hugh Edward Millington Stutfield
  3. The sinister side: how left-right symbolism shaped Western art, James Hall, p. 278