A hoop crown (German: Bügelkrone or Spangenkrone,[1] Latin: faislum),[2] arched crown, or closed crown, is a crown consisting of a "band around the temples and one or two bands over the head".[3] First used by the Carolingian dynasty,[4] hoop crowns became increasingly popular among royal dynasties in the Late Middle Ages,[5] and the dominant type of crown in the Modern Era.[6]
Hoop crowns were introduced to Germanic Europe by the Carolingian dynasty,[4] who usurped the throne of the Frankish Empire from the Merovingian dynasty in 751. However their use dates back to the end of the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire.[7] The Carolingian hoop crown was most probably[2] derived from the contemporary Germanic hoop helmet (German: Spangenhelm).[4] The oldest such crown is the Crown of Saint Faith in Conques, worn either by Pepin I (797–838) or Pepin II (823–864) of Aquitaine.[2] Other Carolingians known to have worn hoop crowns are Louis II "the German" (806–876), Charles II "the Bald" (823–877) and Odo of Vermandois (910–946).[2] Charlemagne (742–814) possibly wore a hoop crown, although the obscurities of contemporary portraits, in particular on seals, mean that this cannot be stated with certainty.[8] Sometimes, the Carolingian hoop crowns were combined with a cap, worn beneath.[3]
Though hoop crowns were characteristic for Carolingian kings, there were several other types of crowns worn by the members of this dynasty.[3] For example, Charlemagne also wore a crown shaped like a collar with an attachment on the front side.[8] The features most Carolingian crowns had in common were "cap or bands over the head, edge-bands, and pendilia".[3] Some of the Carolingian crowns were imitations of contemporary Byzantine Imperial crowns,[3] which had the shape of a closed cap (kamelaukion).[2] In turn, Byzantine Emperor Justinian I "the Great" (483–565) had hoops attached to his crown to carry a cross above it, creating the prototype of later hoop crowns.[1]
Hoop crowns became popular in late medieval Europe.[5] The Holy Roman Imperial crown was a hoop crown.[5] Norman king William the Conqueror wore a hoop crown, and in the 12th century, the kings of Hungary amended their collar with two hoops.[5] In both cases, the object of adopting a hoop crown was not to appear to occupy a position of inferiority to the Holy Roman Emperor.[5] William's crown was modelled after the crown of emperor Otto I and similarly decorated with twelve types of gems.[9] In addition, William had sceptre and virga created, resembling the imperial insignia.[9]
However, not all late medieval crowns had hoops. For example, the 15th-century kings of France wore crowns of the lilly type, a collar decorated with four lilies.[6] The hoop crown became the prevalent type of crown in the Early Modern Age.[6]