Bitard Explained

The Bitard is a fabulous animal. It is the symbol of the or Order of the Venerated Bitard (May He be Blessed!), a student association of University of Poitiers (France) created in the 1920s. The members themselves are also called Bitards and in some occasions they wear a cape colored according to their rank in the Order, along with a faluche, the traditional French Student cap. The Bitards' faluche has the particularity of being decorated with a chevron and having its own code for the signification of insignias. The folklore of the Order refers to François Rabelais as the word appears twice in hunting outcomes in Pantagruel.[1]

Each year, the Order organizes a one-week festival, called the (69th Students' Week). Various festive activities happen during this week, including a procession,[2] drinking events and a Bitard hunting. There is also a fresco depicting the hunting of the Bitard on an interior wall of the Roche-d'Argent university restaurant (located in downtown Poitiers, near the Saint-Jean baptistery). A concrete statue of a phallus, called "quéquette" or "blanche verge et les sept mains", erected by the Order of the Bitard in 1976 on the Poitiers campus, is a folk symbol for Poitiers students. The sculpture accidentally destroyed, during construction, in October 2015, was rebuilt, in April 2016.[3]

Notes and References

  1. French. La chasse au Bitard des étudiants poitevins: Panurge bachelier . C . Escarmant . JL . Le Quellec . Études rabelaisiennes . 2006 . PDF.
  2. L'ordre du bitard à Poitiers . 1968 . Institut national de l'audiovisuel . French.
  3. http://www.centre-presse.fr/article-454666-les-bitards-entre-deuxieme-sec-et-nouvelle-quequette.html Les Bitards entre "deuxième sec" et "nouvelle quéquette"