Academic dress of Oxford University

This page concerns the Academic dress of Oxford University.

As is natural in the oldest university in the United Kingdom, the University of Oxford has a long tradition of academic dress.

Contents

When academic dress is worn

Academic dress is still worn very often in Oxford, and every undergraduate goes in his or her first week to buy a gown, cap and white bow tie (for men) or black ribbon (for women) for the purpose of enrollment in the University (known as matriculation).

In most colleges, gowns are worn to:

  • Formal Hall (formal dinner--every night in some colleges, once a term in others)
  • Chapel
  • College collections (start of term tests)
  • Head of House's collections (end of term reports)
  • College matriculation

Gowns and caps are worn to disciplinary hearings in the Proctors' Court.

In addition, gowns are worn with cap, hood (for graduates), and sub-fusc to:

  • University examinations
  • University matriculation
  • Graduation ceremonies
  • The annual Encaenia (Commemoration) ceremony.

Components of Oxford academic dress

Gowns

The gowns in use in Oxford can be divided into two basic shapes. All gowns are open-fronted, except for the Doctors' convocation habit which is closed at the front.

Clerical-type gowns

  • Scholar's gown
  • BA gown
  • MA gown
  • Doctors' full dress gown
  • Doctors' convocation habit
  • Proctors' dress gown

The clerical-type gown has no collar, but instead has the voluminous material of its back and sleeves gathered into a yoke.

Gowns of the same basic shape are worn by barristers (see court dress), preachers and bishops in the Church of England.

Lay-type gowns

  • Commoners' gown
  • Graduate students' gown
  • Higher faculties bachelors' laced gown
  • Doctors' undress laced gown
  • Chancellor's gold laced gown

The lay-type gown derives from a garment fashionable in Elizabethan times. It is less voluminous than the clerical-type gown, and has a flap collar and long closed sleeves with arm slits just above the elbow.

Gowns of the same basic shape are worn by solicitors, Queen's Counsel, court ushers, the Speaker of the House of Commons, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and the Lord Chancellor.

Hoods

Hoods in Oxford are of three shapes. Doctors' hoods are scarlet in the Oxford full shape. All other hoods can be either in the Burgon shape or the Oxford simple shape.

Generally hoods are worn by graduates whenever sub-fusc is worn, but sometimes they are worn with an ordinary tie, e.g. by a lecturer at a public lecture.

Academic caps

Men wear a mortarboard (also known as a square), which is not worn indoors, except by the Chancellor, Vice-Chancellor and Proctors. When meeting the Vice-Chancellor, Proctors, or other senior official of the university in the street, it is traditional for a man to touch or raise his cap. In practice few people wear their caps nowadays, and instead carry their caps on occasions where caps are required.

Women may choose between the mortarboard or the soft cap. The soft cap is not removed indoors, although the mortarboard may now be removed or left on indoors at the wearer's discretion.

Doctors in the lay faculties (i.e. those except Divinity and Philosophy) wear Tudor bonnets, which are round and made of velvet.

Sub-fusc

Sub-fusc means "of a dark/dusky colour" in Latin, and refers to the clothes worn with full academic dress in Oxford. Generally, this involves a dark suit, white shirt, collar, and bow tie and a dark suit for men, a white blouse and black ribbon for women. A cap (mortar board) must be carried by undergraduates and can be worn by graduates. In addition, doctors in the higher faculties and senior university officials wear bands, such as those worn with legal court dress.

Members of Her Majesty's Forces may wear their service uniform with gown and hood in place of sub-fusc. Thus it is not too unusual to see people wearing swords to sit university examinations. Persons in Holy Orders may wear their clerical dress.

This is worn at Matriculation, the ceremony of acceptance into the Univeristy, and during University exams. During exams, candidates often also wear a carnation in their buttonholes: white for the first examination of the term, and pink for subsequent examinations until the final examination, when a red carnation is worn.

Student dress

Undergraduates

Commoners (i.e. those without a scholarship or exhibition) wear a short black lay-type gown which just covers the suit jacket. The gowns have a flap collar and instead of sleeves have two streamers adorned with folds. These are the remnants of closed sleeves, as can still be seen on the laced gowns of the higher faculties.

Scholars (and some exhibitioners) wear a black clerical-type gown down to the knee. The gowns are gathered at the yoke, and have bell sleeves to the elbows (in effect they are short versions of the BA gown).

Until the abolition of their statuses in the nineteenth century, gentlemen-commoners and noblemen-commoners each had distinct gowns, generally of coloured silk in the lay shape, decorated with lace.

Undergraduates and mortarboards

It is sometimes claimed that undergraduates by custom do not wear their caps. This is incorrect. For example, undergraduates appearing before the Proctors' Court are required to present themselves wearing their caps and to salute the Proctors in the customary manner upon entering. They are then usually invited to remove their caps for the remainder of the proceedings. As mentioned above, it is customary to touch or raise one's cap as a salute to senior officials of one's college or the University.

Furthermore, it is also only in recent years that female undergraduates have been permitted to remove their mortarboards during university ceremonies. As mentioned earlier, women who opt for the traditional soft cap do not have this dispensation, and should remain covered at all times.

Postgraduates

Graduate students who do not have an Oxford degree wear a black lay-type gown that is a full-sized version of the commoner's gown, reaching to the knee. However, they are not worn by graduates of other universities who are reading for the degree of Bachelor of Arts, who wear a commoner's or scholar's gown as appropriate. Nor are they worn by non-members of the University reading for diplomas, who wear no gown, even with sub-fusc. In practice, many graduate students wear the academic dress of their old university except at those occasions where "foreign" academic dress is prohibited, such as the Encaenia and the second half of degree ceremonies when the graduand pays his respects to the Vice-Chancellor in the dress of his new Oxford degree.

Graduate dress

See also Degrees of Oxford University.

BA and MA

The two most common graduate gowns in Oxford are the Bachelor of Arts (BA) and Master of Arts (MA) gowns, which are worn by new graduates of whatever subject. The degree of Masters of Arts is granted to graduates 21 terms after matriculation, and is one of the most significant degrees as it historically conferred full membership of the University. It is hence frequently worn even by people who have a higher degree, such as a doctorate.

The BA gown is a long black clerical-type gown with long bell-shaped sleeves to the wrists. The gown is gathered at the yoke. The MA gown is similar to the BA gown, except that the long sleeves are squared and closed at the ends, with a crescent cut out of each sleeve-end, and a horizontal slit just above the elbow for the arm to pass through.

The hoods are as follows:

  • MA - black silk edged and lined with crimson / shot crimson silk
  • BA - black silk half lined and bound with white rabbit fur

Doctors

Doctors in Oxford have three forms of academic dress: undress, full dress and convocation dress.

The undress gown in the lay faculties is a black lay-type gown with a flap collar and closed sleeves, decorated with black silk lace, . The gown may be worn with a doctor's hood, which is scarlet lined with coloured silk:

  • DM, DCL - scarlet cloth (full shape) lined with crimson silk
  • DLitt, DSc - scarlet cloth (full shape) lined with grey silk
  • DPhil - scarlet cloth (full shape) lined with dark blue silk

The full dress gown is a scarlet clerical-type gown, with open bell-shaped sleeves and gathered at the yoke. The sleeves and facings are in the appropriate coloured silk. The full dress gown of Doctors of Music is exceptional (see below). Full dress gowns are normally worn with sub-fusc, but never with a hood.

The convocation habit or chimere is like a scarlet full-dress gown, except in that it has no sleeves, is fully lined with silk of the appropriate colour, and closed at the front. It is worn over the black undress gown, with the sleeves of the undress gown pulled through the armhole of the chemir. It is always worn with white tie, bands and hood. A similar garment (in scarlet or black) is worn over a white rochet by bishops in the Church of England e.g. when sitting in the House of Lords.

Lay higher faculties

Members with postgraduate bachelors or masters degrees in the lay higher faculties (i.e. those other than Divinity or Arts) wear gowns almost identical to the lay doctors' undress gowns.

The hoods of bachelors and masters of the lay higher faculties are as follows:

  • MCh - black silk edged and lined with dark blue silk
  • BM BCh, BCL - steel blue silk half lined and bound with white rabbit fur
  • MLitt, MSc - light blue silk edged and lined with grey silk
  • BLitt, BSc (no longer awarded) - light blue silk half lined and bound with white rabbit fur
  • BMus - lilac silk half lined and bound with white rabbit fur
  • MPhil, BPhil - dark blue silk edged and lined with white silk

Divinity

Bachelors and doctors of Divinity, unlike their counterparts in the other higher faculties, do not wear the black silk laced gown but wear a black undress gown of the clerical type, identical to the MA gown, but in silk rather than stuff. This is worn with a cassock, cincture and scarf.

Doctors of divinity also have the scarlet full dress gown and the scarlet convocation habit, which is worn over the black silk gown.

The hoods in the faculty of divinity are as follows:

  • DD - scarlet cloth (full shape) lined with black silk
  • BD - black silk (full shape) lined with black silk

Music

Doctors of music have no convocation habit. Instead of scarlet the full dress gown is made of cream silk brocade with apple blossom embroidery, with cherry silk sleeves. The hood worn with the undress gown is of the same materials:

  • DMus - cream apple blossom silk brocade (full shape) lined with cherry silk

Other masters' and bachelors' degrees

The newer masters degrees follow with the silk gown of the lay higher faculties, and the following hoods:

  • MBA - claret silk edged and lined with dark blue silk
  • MSt - deep green silk edged and lined with white silk
  • MEd (no longer awarded) - black silk edged and lined with green silk
  • MTh - black silk edged and lined with magenta silk

Holders of the MJur degree wear the BCL hood.

The newer bachelors' degrees follow with the stuff gown of the BA, and the following hoods:

  • BFA - black silk with a narrow band of gold silk
  • BEd (no longer awarded) - black silk with a narrow band of green silk
  • BTh - black silk with a narrow band of magenta silk

University officials

The Chancellor

The Chancellor of the University is elected for life by the Convocation (i.e. the alumni with degrees) of the University. He wears on ceremonial occasions a black silk lay-type gown with a long train, decorated with gold lace, similar to the gowns of the Lord Chancellor and the Chancellor of the Exchequer. In undress he wears the DCL dress or undress gown. In Oxford he always wears white tie and bands.

The Vice-Chancellor

Previously Vice-Chancellors had no distinctive dress, but instead wore the convocation habit if they were doctors or the MA gown and hood if they were not. When Dr John Hood, a non-MA from outside the Congregation of the University, was appointed Vice-Chancellor in 2005, a new lay-type gown was designed for him, being black with simple gold trimming. He always wears white tie and bands.

Proctors

The two proctors in Oxford are responsible for the discipline of junior members of the university. In addition they have various ceremonial and administrative roles.

In Oxford the proctors wear white tie and bands, and a black clerical-type gown of the doctors’ full dress pattern with sleeves and facings of blue velvet. A hood fully lined with miniver is worn turned inside out so that only the fur is visible. This was formerly the full dress of the M.A.. On their undress M.A. gown they have a tippet, or small pouch, sewn to the yoke, which they keep for life.

In both Oxford and Cambridge the Proctors could formerly be seen patrolling the streets after dark with the university police, or bulldogs, who wore top hats in Cambridge and bowler hats in Oxford.

The Assessor

Previously the Assessor wore an MA gown with a tippet sewn onto the yoke. He now wears a Proctor's dress gown with purple instead of blue velvet sleeves.

Bedels

The university bedels, or mace-bearers, wear plain black lay-type gowns and tudor bonnets, and white tie and bands.

External links

Oxford University Academic Dress Regulations (http://www.admin.ox.ac.uk/statutes/regulations/48-012.shtml)

Shepherd and Woodward (http://www.shepherdandwoodward.co.uk/acatalog/) - a shop in Oxford selling academic dress - contains pictures of various gowns'

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