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Hoop crown : ウィキペディア英語版
Hoop crown

A hoop crown ((ドイツ語:Bügelkrone) or ''Spangenkrone'',〔Hartmann (online ), entries "Spangenkrone, Bügelkrone"〕 (ラテン語:faislum))〔Lohrmann (1973), p. 764〕 is a crown consisting of a "band around the temples and one or two bands over the head".〔Kornbluth (1990), p. 61〕 First used by the Carolingian dynasty,〔Schramm (1956), p. 888〕 hoop crowns became increasingly popular among royal dynasties in the Late Middle Ages,〔Schramm (1959), p. 562〕 and the dominant type of crown in the Modern Era.〔Schramm (1959), p. 561〕
==Origins==
Hoop crowns were introduced to Germanic Europe by the Carolingian dynasty,〔 who usurped the throne of the Frankish Empire from the Merovingian dynasty in early medieval Europe. However their use dates back to the end of the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire.〔Grierson, P. (1993). Catalogue of the Byzantine Coins in the Dumbarton Oaks Collection and in the Whittemore Collection, 2: Phocas to Theodosius III, 602-717. Universidad de Harvard. Estados Unidos.〕 The Carolingian hoop crown was most probably〔 derived from the contemporary Germanic hoop helmet ((ドイツ語:Spangenhelm)).〔 The oldest such crown is the ''Crown of Saint Faith'' in Conques, worn either by Pepin I (797–838) or Pepin II (823–864) of Aquitaine.〔 Other Carolingians known to have worn hoop crowns are Louis II "the German" (806–876), Charles II "the Bald" (823–877) and Odo of Vermandois (910–946).〔 Charlemagne (742–814) possibly wore a hoop crown, although the bad shape of the respective contemporary portraits, especially on bulls, does not allow to assert this with certainty.〔RGA V (1984), p. 371〕 Sometimes, the Carolingian hoop crowns were combined with a cap, worn beneath.〔
Though hoop crowns were characteristic for Carolingian kings, there were several other types of crowns worn by the members of this dynasty.〔 For example, Charlemagne also wore a crown shaped like a collar with an attachment on the front side.〔 The features most Carolingian crowns had in common were "cap or bands over the head, edge-bands, and pendilia".〔 Some of the Carolingian crowns were imitations of contemporary Byzantine Imperial crowns,〔 which had the shape of a closed cap (kamelaukion).〔 In turn, Byzantine Emperor Justinian I "the Great" (483–565) had hoops attached to his crown to carry a cross above it, creating the prototype of later hoop crowns.〔

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