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White Wedding Dress and Veil:
16th Century England and France
by Charles Panati

White has denoted purity and virginity for centuries.  But in ancient Rome, yellow was the
socially accepted color for a bride's wedding attire, and a veil of flame-hued yellow, the
flammeum, covered her face.  The bridal veil, in fact, predates the wedding dress by centuries.  
And the facial veil itself predates the bridal veil.

Historians of fashion claim that the facial veil was strictly a male invention, and one of the
oldest devices designed to keep married and single women humble, subservient, and hidden
from other males.  Although the veil at various times throughout its long history also served as
a symbol of elegance and intrigue, modesty an mourning, it is one article of feminine attire that
women may never have created for themselves.

Originating in the East at least four thousand years ago, veils were worn throughout life by
unmarried women as a sign of modesty and by married women as a sign of submissiveness to
their husbands.  In Muslim religions, a woman was expected to cover her head and part of her
face whenever she left the house.  As time passed, rules (made by men) became stricter and
only a woman's eyes were permitted to remain uncovered-a concession to necessity, since
ancient veils were of heavy weaves, which interfered with vision.

Customs were less severe and formal in Northern European countries.  Only abducted brides
wore veils.  Color was unimportant, concealment paramount.  Among the Greeks and the
Romans by fourth century B.C., sheer, translucent veils were the vogue at weddings.  They
were pinned to the hair or held in place by ribbons, and yellow had become the preferred
color-for veil and wedding gown.  During the Middle Ages, color ceased to be a primary
concern, emphasis was on the richness of fabric and decorative embellishments.

In England and France, the practice of wearing white at weddings was first commented on by
writers in the sixteenth century.  White was a visual statement of a bride's virginity-so obvious
public statement that it did not please everyone.  Clergyman, for instance, felt that virginity , a
marriage prerequisite, should not be blatantly advertised.  For the next hundred and fifty years,
British newspapers and magazines carried the running controversy fired by white wedding
ensembles.

By the late eighteenth century, white had become the standard wedding color.  Fashion
historians claim this was due mainly to the fact that most gowns of the time were white; that
white was
the color of formal fashion.  In 1813, the first fashion plate of a white wedding
gown and veil appeared in the influential French
Journal des Dames.  From that point onward,
the style was set.