VICTORIAN HUMAN
HAIR SHRINES
G'day folks,
Here is something that people became involved in during the Victorian era.
Meander through enough Sunday flea markets,
and you’re bound to come across a Victorian grief shrine every now and again.
They’re quite hypnotising objects, with their lacquered wood frames and bulbous
glass encasing tiny flower-baskets, spindly trees, and elaborate landscapes.
Take a closer peak, and you’ll realise you’re looking at a shrine made of
someone’s actual hair.
Making shrines and jewellery out of human hair was already
a hot hobby in the Victorian age. Exchanging locks of hair with your friend,
family member, or lover was as common an act of affection as, say, liking a
pal’s Instagram pic today.
Even Napoleon got in on the trend, and requested
that his hair be woven into bracelets for his relatives to remember him
after his passing. But today, we’re honing-in on the hair jewellery and shrines
made in memoriam of loved ones. On that subject, Queen Victoria is a good place
to start.
Grief simply set the tone for the final years of the
Victorian era in both the present-day European Union and United States. In
1861, the unexpected death of the Queen’s husband, Prince Albert, took an
immense toll on the Monarch. Suddenly, grieving the loss of her husband’s death
became a second full-time job.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic, the American
Civil war was under way. To this day, the war remains one of the most intense
periods of domestic carnage and loss in the U.S. The act of crafting a grieving
shrine out of the locks of a loved one’s hair was not only cathartic, but
created a tangible memory of sorts for loved ones lost in battle.
Families would go to great lengths to have craftspeople
make up intricate scenes paying homage to their kin, creating heirlooms for
generations to come. The act even became a rather competitive game, with each
member of the community seeing whose shrine could be biggest.
That’s not to say there were not smaller, more portable
efforts made, namely in the form of rings and brooches. According to
mourning-jewellery specialist Erica Weiner, “before photography came
along, [mourning jewellery] was the main way that people remembered their
departed loved ones.
Clancy's comment: Mm ... And then mobile phones and computer games came along ...
I'm ...
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