Feather cloak


Feather cloaks have been used by several cultures. It constituted noble and royal attire in and other Polynesian regions. It is a mythical bird-skin object that imparts power of flight upon the Gods in mythology and legend, including the account. In medieval Ireland, the chief poet was entitled to wear a feather cloak.
The feather robe or cloak was considered the clothing of the Immortals, and features in swan maiden tale types where a tennyo robbed of her clothing or "feather robe" and becomes bound to live on mortal earth. However, the so-called "feather robe" of the Chinese and Japanese celestial woman came to be regarded as silk clothing or scarves around the shoulder in subsequent literature and iconography.

Hawaii

Elaborate feather cloaks called ʻAhu ʻula were created by early Hawaiians, and usually reserved for the use of high chiefs and aliʻi.
The scarlet honeycreeper ʻIʻiwi was the main source of red feathers. Yellow feathers were collected in small amounts each time from the mostly black ʻōʻō or the mamo.
Another strictly regal item was the kāhili, a symbolic "staff of state" or standard, consisting of pole with plumage attached to the top of it. Princess Nāhiʻenaʻena in her portrait is depicted holding a kāhili while wearing a feather cloak. She would typically wear a feather cloak with a feather coronet and she would match these with a pair of pāʻū which ordinarily would be barkcloth skirt, however, she also had a magnificent yellow feather skirt made for her, which featured in her funerary services.
Other famous examples include:
  • Kamehameha's feather cloak - made entirely of the golden-yellow feather of the mamo, inherited by Kamehameha I. King Kalākaua displayed this artefact to emphasize his own legitimate authority.
  • Kiwalao's feather cloak - King Kīwalaʻō's cloak, captured by half-brother Kamehameha I who slew him in 1782. It symbolized leadership and was worn by chieftains during times of war.
  • Liloa's kāʻei - sash of King Līloa of the island of Hawaii

    Hawaiian mythology

A mythical enemy-incinerating kapa cape, retold as a feather skirt in one telling, occurs in Hawaiian mythology. In the tradition regarding the hero ʻAukelenuiaʻīkū. The hero's grandmother Moʻoinanea, who is the matriarch of divine lizards, gives him her severed tail which transforms into a cape that turns enemies into ashes, and sends him off on a quest to woo his destined wife, Nāmaka. Nāmaka will be immune to the cape's powers. She is also a granddaughter or descendant of the lizard, and has been given the lizard's battle pāʻū and kāhili, also conferred with power to destroy enemy into ashes. In one retelling, Moʻoinanea gives her grandson ʻAukele her "feather skirt" and kāhili which "by shaking.. can reduce his enemies to ashes".
A commentator has argued that the feather garment of Nāhiʻenaʻena was regarded as imbued with the apotropaic "powers of a woman's genitals", reminiscent of the mythic pāʻū which Hiʻiaka was given by Pele.

Māori

It has been noted there is a pan-Polynesian culture of valuing the use of feathers in garments, especially of red colour, and there had even existed ancient trade in feathers. While various featherwork apparel were widespread across Polynesia, feather capes were limited to Hawaiʻi and New Zealand.
The Māori feather cloak or kahu huruhuru are known for their rectangular-shaped examples. The most prized were the red feathers which in Māori culture signified chiefly rank, and were taken from the kākā parrot to make the kahu kura which literally means 'red cape'.
The feather garment continues to be utilized as symbolic of rank or respect.

Brazil

The feather cloak or cape was traditional to the coastal Tupi people, notably the Tupinambá. The cape was called guará-abucu in Tupi–Guarani, so called from the red plumage of guará and not only did it have a hood at the top, but it was meant to cover the body to simulate becoming a bird, and even included a buttocks piece called enduaps. These feather capes were worn by Tupian shamans or pajé during rituals, and clearly held religious or sacred meaning. The cape was also worn in battle, but it has been clarified that the warrior as well as his victim were deliberately dressed as birds as executioners and the offering in ritual sacrifices.

Germanic

A bird-hamr or feather cloak that enables the wearers to take the form of, or become, birds are widespread in Germanic mythology and legend. The goddess Freyja was known for her "feathered or falcon cloak", which could be borrowed by others to use, and the jötunn Þjazi may have had something similar, referred to as an arnarhamr.
The term hamr has the dual meaning of "skin" or "shape", and in this context, fjaðrhamr has been translated variously as "feather-skin", "feather-fell", "feather-cloak", "feather coat", "feather-dress", "coat of feathers", or form, shape or guise.
The topic is often discussed in the broader sense of "ability to fly", inclusive of Óðinn's ability to transform into bird shape, and Wayland's flying contraption. This wider categorization is necessitated due to ambiguity: in the case of Óðinn resorting to the arnarhamr, it is unclear whether this should be construed literally to mean the use of a garment, or be taken metaphorically as shape-shifting, perhaps by use of magic. Also, Völundr's "wing" is not a "feather cloak" per se, but only likened to it.

Gods and jötnar

In Norse mythology, goddesses Freyja and Frigg each own a feather cloak that imparts the ability of flight.
Freyja is not attested as using the cloak herself, however she lent her fjaðrhamr to Loki so he could fly to Jötunheimr after Þórr's hammer went missing in Þrymskviða, and to rescue Iðunn from the jötunn Þjazi in Skáldskaparmál who had abducted the goddess while in an arnarhamr. The latter episode is also attested in the poem Haustlöng, where Freyja's garment is referred to as hauks flugbjalfa "hawk's flying-fur", or "hawk's flight-skin" and the jötunn employs a gemlishamr "cloak/shape of eagle".
Loki also uses Frigg's feather cloak to journey to Geirröðargarða, referred to here as a valshamr.
Óðinn is described as being able to change his shape into that of animals, as attested in the Ynglinga saga. Furthermore, in the story of the Mead of Poetry from Skáldskaparmál, although Óðinn changes attire into an "eagle skin", this is interpreted as assuming an "eagle-form" or "shape", especially by later scholars; meanwhile, scholar Ruggerini argues Óðinn can use shape-shifting magic without the need of such skin, in contrast to the jötunn Suttung, who must put on his "eagle skin" in order to pursue him.

''Völsunga saga''

In the Völsunga saga, the wife of King Rerir is unable to conceive a child and so the couple prays to Oðinn and Frigg for help. Hearing this, Frigg then sends one of her maids wearing a krákuhamr to give the royal couple a magic apple which when eaten, made the queen pregnant with her son Völsung.

Swan maidens

There were also the three swan-maidens, also described as valkyrjur, and owned sets of "swan's garments" or "swan cloaks", and these gave the wearer the form of a swan. And the maidens were wedded to Wayland the Smith and his brothers, according to the prose prologue to Völundarkviða.
This bears similarity to the account of the eight valkyrjur with hamir in Helreið Brynhildar.

Wayland

The master smith Wayland uses some sort of device to fly away and escape from King Niðhad after he is hamstrung, as described in the Eddic lay Völundarkviða. The lay has Völundr saying he has regained his "webbed feet" which soldiers had taken away from him, and with it he is able to soar into air. This is explained as a circumlocution for him recovering a magical artifact, which allows him to transform into a swan or such waterfowl with webbed feet. An alternate interpretation is that the text here should not be construed as "feet" but "wings", which gave him ability to fly away.
The second "wing" scenario coincides with the version of the story given in Þiðreks saga, where Völundr's brother Egill shot birds and collected plumage for him, providing him with the raw material for crafting a set of wings, and this latter story is also corroborated on depictions on the panels of the 8th-century whale-bone Franks Casket.
In the Þiðreks saga Wayland 's device is referred to as "wings" or rather a single "wing" but is described as resembling a fjaðrhamr, supposedly flayed from a griffin, or vulture, or an ostrich. Some modern commentators suggest that the Low German source originally just meant "wings", but the Norse translators took license to interpret it as being just like a "feather cloak". In the saga version, Velent not only requested his brother Egill to obtain the plumage material but also asks Egill to wear the wings first to perform a test flight. Afterwards Velent himself escapes with the wings, and instructs Egil to shoot him aiming at the concealed blood sack prop to fake his death.

Metaphorical sense

As already noted, hamr could mean either a physical "skin" or the abstract "shape", and though on first blush, Freyja seems to have a a "feather cloak" she could lend to others, Larrington for instance glosses the feather cloak not as a 'skin' but an 'attribute' of the goddess which gives her ability to fly. Vincent Samson explains the hamr as the physical aspect taken on by a mobile soul when undergoing animal transformation, noting that François-Xavier Dillmann defines hamr as "external form of the soul".

Germanic translations of Celtic material

The Breton lai of Bisclavret was translated in the Old Norse Strengleikar, the notion of "shape of animal" was rendered as hamr. Another instance of such figure of speech usage occurs in the Old Norse telling of the British king's flying contraption, cf. below:

Bladud's wings

The legendary king Bladud of the Celtic Britons fashioned himself a pair of wings to fly with, according to the original account in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae. This winged contraption is rendered as a "fjaðrhamr" in the Old Norse translation Breta sögur, here meant strictly as a flying suit, not a means of transformation into bird.
Bladud's wings are also rendered into Middle English as "", cognate with, in Layamon's Brut version of Geoffrey's History.

Other

There are bird-people depicted on the Oseberg tapestry fragments, which may be some personage or deity wearing winged cloaks, but it is difficult to identify the figures or even ascertain gender.

Celtic

King Bladud of Britain created artificial wings to enable flight according to Galfridian sources, conceived of as "feather skin" in Old Norse and Middle English versions.

Poet's cloak

In Ireland, the elite class of poets known as the filid wore a feathered cloak, the tuigen, according to Sanas Cormaic. Although the term may merely refer to a "precious" sort of toga, as Cormac glosses in Latin, it can also signify 'covering ' 'of birds', and the Glossary goes on to describe the composition of this garment in minute detail.
Cormac's glossary describes the tuigen as follows: "for it is of skins of birds white and many-coloured that the poets' toga is made from their girdle downwards, and of mallards' necks and of their crests from the girdle upwards to their neck".
Although John O'Donovan recognized an attestation to the cloak in the Lebor na Cert, where verses by Benén mac Sescnéin are quoted, this may be an artefact of interpretive translation. In O'Donovan's rendition, the verse reads that the rights of the Kings of Cashel rested with the chief poet of Ireland, together with his bird cloak, where the term taeidhean is construed to be synonymous with tugen. However, taíden is glossed as "Band, troop, company" and in a modern translation Myles Dillon renders the same line as "The answer will always be found at the assemblies" with no mention of the bird cloak.
The tuigen is also described in the Immacallam in dá Thuarad. According to the narrative, in Ulster, Néde son of Adna gains the ollam’s position of his father, supplanting the newly appointed Ferchertne, then goes on to sit on the ollam’s chair and wears the ollam’s robe, which were of three colors, i.e., a band of bright bird's feathers in the middle, speckling of findruine metal on the bottom, and "golden colour on the upper half". The tuigen is also mentioned in passing when Ferchertne speaks poetically and identifies his usurper as the young Néde, undeceived by the fake beard of grass.
The tuigen is also referred to in the 17th elegy written for Eochaidh Ó hÉoghusa.
In the Old Norwegian work Konungs skuggsjá, one can read a description of lunatics called "gelts" sprouting feathers, in the chapter dealing with Irish marvels :
Regarding the above description of the "Gelts" sprouting feathers, it refers to the Irish word geilt meaning a "lunatic" induced into madness by fear from battle such as described in "King's Mirror" above. The word geilt also occurs as a nickname for "Suibne Geilt" or "Mad Sweeney" who transforms into a feathered form according to the medieval narrative Buile Shuibhne.
This concept is adapted to the Greco-Roman mythology; Mercury, god of medicine, wears a "bird covering" or "feather mantle" rather than talaria in medieval Irish versions of classical literature, such as the Aeneid.

China

A stirt concerning the guhuoniao found in the Xuan zhong ji as quoted in the Bencao Gangmu describes a creature which uses a yimao to transform into a bird; it can then shed the feathers to transform into a human woman, and attempts to snatch away human children, being childless herself.
The surviving text of Guo Pu's Xuan zhong ji continues on, and appends another tale that is more of the typical swan maiden type, where a youth from steals the yimao from one of six or seven maidens, the others fly away as birds, but the man forces the earthbound maiden to marry him. She later discovers her robe under a pile of rice and flies away. She returns with three more cloaks for her three daughters, and flies away with them. These bird-women were later called guiche. This is arguably the oldest example of the swan maiden type tale, with a slight variant of near contemporaneous date found in the Sou shen ji, where the setting is given more precisely as Xinyu town in Yuzhang Area.
In the Chinese Daoist concept of gods and immortals, these immortals wear feather garments or yuyi. The xian also included human-born Daoists who purportedly attained immortality. These immortals have their antecedents in the myth of "feather-humans" or "winged men". These "winged spirits" occur in ancient art, such as Han dynasty cast bronzes, and an example appear to be clothed and possess a pair of wings. Early literary attestations are rather scant, though the Chu Ci anthology may be cited as mentioning the yuren.
These yuren were originally supernatural divinities and strictly non-human, but later conflated or strongly associated with the xian immortals, which Daoist adepts could aspire to become.
The Book of Han records that the Emperor Wu of Han allowed the fangshi sorcerer Luan Da to wear a feathered garment in his presence, interpreted to be the granting of the privilege to publicly appeal the sorcerer's attainment of the winged immortal's power or status. A later commentator of the early Tang dynasty, Yan Shigu clarifies that the winged garment yuyi was made from bird feathers, and signifies the gods and immortals taking flight.
In the early Tang dynasty, the Empress Wu Zetian commanded her favorite paramour Daoist Zhang Changzong to be dressed up in a mock-up of famed Dao master. Part of the costume set he wore included a "bird-feathered coat". The coat was referred to as a ji cui, that is to say, made from the gathered feathers of the kingfisher.

Shift to silk garment

Regarding the High Tang period Emperor Xuanzong, legend has it that he composed or arranged the . According to the fabulous account, the Emperor was conveyed to the immortal realm by a xian named. The "rainbow skirts" and "feathered coats" in the tune's title have been surmised by commentators to refer to the clothing described as worn by the dancing immortal women in this account, namely the "white loose-fitting silk dress". Hence it is supposed that in the popular image of those times, the celestial "feather coats" were being regarded as silken, more specifically "white glossed silk" garments.
In modern times, a number of folktales have been collected from all over China that are classed as the swan-maiden type, which are renditions of the Weaver Maiden and the Cowherd legend. These consequently may not strictly have a "feather garment" as the implement in the flying motif. In the tale type, the Weaver Maiden is usually forcibly taken back to her celestial home, and the earthly Cowherd follows after, using various items, including heavenly costumes and girdles, but also oxen or oxhide in many cases. Although flight using oxhide seems counterintuitive, Wu Xiadon has devised the theory that the Weaver Girl's primordial form was the silkworm, and the ancient silk-woman or silk-horse myth, where a girl wrapped in the skin of her favorite horse metamorphoses into a silkworm. But even disregarding this theory, the Weaver Girl in China is considered and more a divinity of silk and sericulture, a being who descended from heaven and taught mankind how to raise silkworms. Namely, the notion that the celestial Weaver Girl raised silkworms in heaven, spun the thread into silk, and wore the woven silk garment is a widely accepted piece of lore.

Crane cloak

Cloth or clothing with the down of the crane woven in were called hechang or changyi, and existed as actual pieces of clothing by the Tang Dynasty. It was standard uniform for courtly guards during Tang and Song, but both men and women civilians wore them also. A Taoist priest or adept wore these as well. It is also mentioned in the famous novel Dream of the Red Chamber that the ladies Lin Daiyu and Xue Baochai wore such "crane cloak".

Japan

In Japan, there are also swan maiden type legends about a tennyo coming to the earthly world and having her feather garment or hagoromo stolen. This hagoromo is variously translated as "feather cloak", or "feather robe", etc. The oldest attestation is localized at in Ōmi Province and was recorded in a fragmentary quote from the lost Fudoki of that province.
There is also the well-known folktale of the, where the crane-wife weaves fine cloth out of her own feathers, which might bear some relationship with the heavenly feather cloak.
The miniature boy deity Sukunabikona is described as wearing a garment made of wren's feathers in the Nihon shoki.
The Nara Period refers to a byōbu or a folding "screen with figures of ladies standing; design worked out with birds' feathers". That is to say, almost looks like a monochrome line-painting or piece, but had feathers of the copper pheasant pasted on them. In particular, the 2nd panel of 6 depicts a woman with a peculiar costume said to be a "feather garment", with "petal-shaped lobes overlapping like scales, extending from top to bottom". This is said to indicate the Japanese court's awareness of the trend in Tang Dynasty China of wearing garments using bird feathers. Art historian goes as far as to say this was an homage or allusion to the Chinese Daoist tradition that divinity and immortals wore yingyi made of bird's feathers.
The ancient swan maiden type myth does not only occur in the where the heavenly woman is forcibly married to a man. In different tale found in the, the heavenly woman is forcibly adopted by an old childless couple. Although only the former text explicitly mentions "feather robe", and the Tango version only says it was the heavenly woman's costume which was hidden away, it is surmised that the feather garment was meant there as well.
In The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, Princess Kaguya mounts a flying cart and ascends to the "Moon Palace", while the angelic tennin who arrived to escort her also brought for her the hagoromo feather garment as well as the medicine of immortality and agelessness. Due to the flying car, the feather garment here is supposedly not a direct means for her to be able to fly, and it is guessed to be an article of clothing she needs in order for her to transform or revert back into a genuine celestial being. It is pointed out that many scholars assume the tennin here to be the dictionary definition Buddhist entities, but the concept of immortality is incongruent with the Buddhist core tenet of transience and rebirth, so the tennin must really be regarded as the borrowing of divinities and immortals of Taoism.

As silken attire or scarf

The ancient legend about the Princess classed as a hagoromo densetsu fails to clarify how she was able to fly away as tennnyo. But the legend has a later Heian Period version where she put on a hire, i.e., a scarf and took flight.
In other words, the so-called "feather robe" hagoromo came to be commonly depicted as what can only be described as the sheer silk scarf, called "" in olden times.
Later in the Muromachi Period, in performances of the Noh play Hagoromo, the dancing actor portraying the heavenly female tennyo wears a supposed hagoromo feather garment. The prop costume is apparently made from whitish thin silk. Though the theatrical convention serves merely as a hint to what the original hagoromo garment was like, but since sheer silk has been prized since the ancient Han or earlier, and even unearthed in Japanese Yayoi period sites, the hagoromo legend costume may well share origins with the tennnyo images found in Buddhist temples, etc. according to scholar Junrō Nunome, professedly speaking out of his textile expertise, being a non-folklorist.
One caveat is that even though dictionaries typically define tennyo as a Buddhist female entity, it has been pointed out that tennyo is actually a "heavenly" female from Taoism, one among the deities and immortals who dwell in the xian realm. This caveat also applies to the Bamboo Cutter's daughter Kaguya, who ascends to the "Moon Palace". As for the Nara Period work of art using real bird feathers, it has been theorized that it alludes to the feather garments of the shenxian, as aforementioned.
But even in the context of the shenxian garments, later literature dating to the golden age of Tang ascribe the Daoist heavenly immortals wearing spun and softened silk, as in the legendary tale surrounding the "".

Explanatory notes

Primary

  • and "", p. xxii, 'valshamr'.
  • The chapter numbering follows the 1848 Copenhagen edition, which is the one usually cited.
  • Secondary

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  • * Ozaki, Nobuo "」, Gakuen 学苑, pp. 2–12
  • Tei, Kagei /
Category:Polynesian clothing
Category:Textile arts of Hawaii
Category:History of Oceanian clothing
Category:Featherwork
Category:Mythological clothing
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