A liripipe [1] is an element of clothing, the tail of a hood or cloak, or a long-tailed hood. The modern-day liripipe appears on the hoods of academic dress.
With long-tailed hoods it includes in particular a chaperon or gugel, or the peak of a shoe. A graffito on the church wall of Swannington Church in Norfolk depicts a "late medieval woman wearing a long, laced gown and hood with a long liripipe ornament."[2]
In modern times, liripipe mostly refers to the tail of the cowl of an academic hood, seen at graduation ceremonies.
Liripipe was popular from the mid-14th to the end of the 15th century. 'Liripipe', and the phrase 'liripipe hood', which are often used by costume historians, are not medieval words but scholarly adoptions dating to the early modern period to describe a fashion which appears very often in medieval art, in the form of a long extension to a hood. It could be worn hanging down, or, by the 15th century, is depicted wrapped round the head or the neck.[3]
The word is believed to originate from the Medieval Latin term Latin: liripipium, which is of unsure origin. Webster's Dictionary suggests it is a corruption of Latin: cleri ephippium ("clergy's tippet"), but this is uncertain. The Oxford English Dictionary, attributing the hypothesis to Gilles Ménage, calls it a "ludicrous guess".[4]
Perhaps due to its academic association, the word has the obsolete sense of "part or lesson committed to memory", as in the expressions "to know one's liripipe" and "to teach someone his liripipe".[4]
Another possible origin for the word is that it refers to the resemblance of the hood's "tail" to a long, thin purse used to hold coins, literally a "lira pipe".
Liripipe often appears in text as implicit criticism of absurd or exaggerated fashion: in the 1360s the author of the Chronicle Eulogium Historiarum sive Temporis mentions liripipes that hang right down to the heels like ridiculous strips (liripipia usque talum longa modo fatuorum dilacerata
The term was also applied to the exaggerated toes of the medieval pigache and poulaine shoes, as in a 14th-century statute of Oxford University.
The variant spelling liripoop has also the obsolete meaning of "silly person",[4] most probably because it is an inherently funny word, cf. "Nincompoop".[5]
"No plausible etymology has been found [...] Ménage's ludicrous guess, that Latin: liripipium is a corruption of Latin: cleri ephippium, is repeated seriously in recent "