Dictionary Definition
cockade n : an ornament (such as a knot of ribbon
or a rosette) usually worn on the hat
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) /kɒkˈeɪd/
- Rhymes: -eɪd
Noun
- A rosette worn in a hat as an office or party badge.
Translations
- Bosnian: kokarda
- Catalan: escarapel·la
- French: cocarde
- German: Kokarde
- Serbian:
- Spanish: escarapela
Extensive Definition
A cockade is a knot of ribbons, or other
circular- or oval-shaped symbol of distinctive colors which is
usually worn on a hat.
Cockades of the revolutionaries
In the eighteenth
century, it was pinned on the side of a man's tricorne or cocked hat, or
on his lapel. Women could also wear it on their hat or in their
hair. A cockade uses distinctive colors to show the allegiance of
its wearer to some political faction, their rank, or as part of a
servant's livery. In pre-revolutionary France, the cockade of the
Bourbon
dynasty was all white. In the Kingdom
of Great Britain a white cockade was worn by those supporting
the restoration of a Jacobite
monarchy, while in contrast the established Hanoverian monarchy
they were trying to overthrow had one that was all black. But
elsewhere and at other times there was more variety.
During the American
Revolution, the Continental
Army initially wore cockades of various colors as an ad hoc
form of rank insignia, as General George
Washington wrote:
''"As the Continental Army has unfortunately no
uniforms, and consequently many inconveniences must arise from not
being able to distinguish the commissioned officers from the
privates, it is desired that some badge of distinction be
immediately provided; for instance that the field officers may have
red or pink colored cockades in their hats, the captains yellow or
buff, and the subalterns green."''
Before long however, the Continental Army
reverted to wearing the black cockade they inherited from the
British. Later, when
France became an ally of the United States, the Continental
Army pinned the white cockade of the French Ancien
Régime onto their old black cockade; the French reciprocally
pinned the black cockade onto their white cockade, as a mark of the
French-American alliance. The black-and-white cockade thus became
known as the "Union Cockade".
Cockades were later widely worn by
revolutionaries and proponents of various political factions in
France and
its colonies beginning in 1789. Just as they did
in the United States a few years before, the French now pinned the
blue-and-red cockade of Paris onto the white cockade of the Ancien
Régime - thus producing the original Tricolore
cockade. Later, distinctive colours and styles of cockade would
indicate the wearer's faction -- although the meanings of the
various styles were not entirely consistent, and varied somewhat by
region and period.
Today, the term is often used to indicate the
tricolour cockade in specific, which became a relatively common
symbol of nationalism during the French
Revolutionary Wars.
Cockades of the European military
Also from the eighteenth
century European monarchies used
cockades to denote the nationalities of their military.
Ribbon-style cockades were worn on tricornes and bicornes just as the French did,
and also on cocked hats
and shakoes; metal cockades were worn at the right side of helmets; small button-type
cockades were worn at the front of kepis and peaked caps.
In particular, the Germans under the
Kaiser used
two cockades on each army headgear: one (black-white-red) for the
empire; the other for the individual German provinces and kingdoms,
which had used their own colors long before. The Weimar
republic removed these, as they might promote faction which
would lead to the dissolution of Germany into petty prinicpalities
again. In the Second
World War, the imperial or Kaiserliche colors of black on the
outside, then white, and red on the inside were used on all army
caps.
France began the first
Air Service in 1909 and soon picked
the traditional French cockade as the first national emblem, now
usually termed a roundel, on military aircraft.
During World War I, other countries adopted national cockades and
used these coloured emblems as roundels on their military aircraft.
These designs often bear an additional central device or emblem to
further identify national aircraft, those from the French navy
bearing a black anchor within the French cockade.
Countries opposed to France and Britain adopted
different national emblems in order to be recognized by their own
forces.
A list of national cockades
The following is an incomplete list of
traditional cockades used by various nations; the colours are
listed from the inside out. If the air force roundel resembles a
cockade but differs from the traditional cockade, the roundel is
also specified.
- Argentina - light blue-white-light blue
- Austria
- red-white-red
- (until 1918: black-gold)
- Belgium - black-yellow-red
- Bolivia - green-yellow-red
- Bulgaria -
red-green-white
- (Bulgarian Air Force roundel: white-green-red)
- Brazil - blue-yellow-green (used as a roundel by aircraft of the Brazilian Navy)
- Chile -
- as worn on peaked cap: blue-white-red with a five-pointed silver star in the middle
- as worn on Pickelhaube: red-white-blue
- Colombia - yellow-blue-red
- Denmark
- red-white-red
- (Royal Danish Air Force roundel: white-red)
- Ecuador - red-blue-yellow
- Estonia - white-black-blue
- Finland - white-blue-white
- France -
blue-white-red
- (the French navy's Naval Aviation roundel have a black anchor drawn upon the cockade)
- Gabon - green-yellow-blue
- Germany
- black-red-gold
- (1871-1945: red-white-black)
- (German Confederation 1848-1871: gold-red-black)
- Great
Britain -
- Royal House of Stuart: orange
- Royal House of Hanover: black
- (RAF, FAA and AAC roundels: red-white-blue or red-blue)
- Greece -
blue-white
- (Hellenic Air Force roundel: blue-white-blue)
- Hungary - green-white-red (oval shaped as opposed to round, with gold metal border)
- Iran - red-white-green
- Ireland
- green-white-orange
- (until 1922: green or sky blue)
- Italy - green-white-red
- Japan - red with white edge (the Hinomaru, worn as a cockade by civilian officials before World War II)
- Mexico - green-white-red
- Monaco - red-white
- Netherlands - orange
- Norway - red-white-blue-white
- Paraguay - blue-white-red
- Peru - red-white-red
- Poland - white-red
- Portugal -
green-red
- (from 1820 to 1910: blue-white)
- (until 1820: blue-red)
- Romania - blue-yellow-red
- Russia -
- military - black-orange-black-orange (the Ribbon of Saint George)
- police - red-blue-white
- (Army Air Service roundel until 1918: white-blue-red)
- San Marino - white-blue
- Spain - red-yellow-red
- Sweden - yellow-blue-yellow
- Turkey - red-white-red
- United States - (white-blue-red, widely used on A.E.F. aircraft 1917-18. Also, blue with a gold eagle reportedly used late 19th century)
- Uruguay:
- military - blue-white-blue with a red diagonal stripe (Artigas's Cockade)
- police - red-white-blue
- civilian - white with four blue rings
- Venezuela - red-blue-yellow
- Yugoslavia - blue-white-red
See also
cockade in Danish: Kokarde
cockade in German: Kokarde (Abzeichen)
cockade in Spanish: Escarapela
cockade in French: Cocarde
cockade in Hungarian: Kokárda
cockade in Italian: Coccarda
cockade in Japanese: 円形章
cockade in Portuguese: Laço (insígnia)
cockade in Russian: Кокарда
cockade in Finnish: Kokardi