kashket

{{Short description|Cap worn mainly by Hasidic Jewish children}}

File:BoysInBluzhev.jpg

A kashket ({{langx|yi|קאַשקעט}}, {{etymology|pl|kaszkiet||uk|кашкет}}; {{etymology|fr|casquette|cap}}; also known as a kashkettel or kasket) is a cap, usually made of felt, worn mainly by Hasidic Jewish children as an alternative to the kippah. It has a crown, a band and peak. From the beginning of the 20th century until World War II, many Russian Jews and Polish Jews wore this cap as part of their everyday dress.

Origins

Caps of this type were introduced during the early 19th century, as cheap and practical workwear for sailors and factory workers in Europe. These became popular among the urban Russian Jewish community in response to the Tsarist authorities banning more traditional Jewish headwear.{{cite book|last=Alon|first=Mati|title=Holocaust and Redemption|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=u1i0dz6p9O4C&pg=PA135|year=2003|publisher=Trafford Publishing|isbn=978-1-4120-0358-2|page=135}}{{Self-published inline|certain=yes|date=January 2018}}

By the mid-19th century, the earlier workman's cap had evolved into the kashket recognisable today, with a narrow crown and a band embroidered with foliage similar to that on a military kepi. Around this time it gained the alternative name of Hamburg cap due to the large number of Russian Jewish immigrants using the Northern German ports as a stopping point on the route to America. This hat was worn daily by Hasidic Jewish boys in Britain, Germany, Russia, Poland, and America from the Victorian era until the mid 20th century, but in the present day it is generally restricted to Shabbat and other formal occasions.{{citation needed|date=July 2017}}

See also

References

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Category:20th-century fashion

Category:Caps

Category:Hasidic clothing

Category:Jewish religious clothing

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