Homburg$35593$ - translation to Αγγλικά
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Homburg$35593$ - translation to Αγγλικά

SOFT FELT HAT WITH THE CROWN DENTED LENGTHWISE AND A SLIGHTLY ROLLED BRIM
Homburg (hat); Homburg+(hat); Homburg hats
  • [[Konrad Adenauer]] and [[Willy Brandt]] (1961), both wearing homburg hats
  • UK Prime Minister]] [[Winston Churchill]] giving his "V" sign during [[World War II]] on [[Downing Street]], [[London]], wearing a homburg hat with a [[black lounge suit]] with [[formal trousers]], dotted [[bowtie]], dark [[waistcoat]] and carrying a [[walking stick]]

Homburg      
n. Homburg (stad in Duitsland); vilthoed (op naam v.d. stad)

Ορισμός

homburg
['h?mb?:g]
¦ noun a man's felt hat having a narrow curled brim and a lengthwise indentation in the crown.
Origin
C19: named after Homburg, a town in western Germany, where such hats were first worn.

Βικιπαίδεια

Homburg hat

A homburg is a semi-formal hat of fur felt, characterized by a single dent running down the centre of the crown (called a "gutter crown"), a wide silk grosgrain hatband ribbon, a flat brim shaped in a "pencil curl", and a ribbon-bound trim about the edge of the brim. It is traditionally offered in black or grey.

The name comes from Bad Homburg in Hesse, in the German Empire, from where it originated as hunting headgear. It was popularised in the late 19th century by the Prince of Wales, the future King Edward VII, as a less formal alternative to the prevalent top hat along with the bowler hat and the boater hat. The original homburg conceived in the 19th century was of slightly more generous proportions than seen in 21st-century versions. Although the homburg is traditionally associated with semi-formal wear, it has been extensively applied also to informal attire.

As with other hats, it largely fell out of everyday use of Western dress codes for men in the 1960s.