-
biretta (Latin: biretum/birretum). In the
Byzantine Empire the term
kamelaukion (καμηλ(λ)αύκιον or καμιλαύκιον) was a more
general one for
formal headgear...
- says that the
kamelaukion (caesar cap) of
Heraclonas was
removed from his head and
replaced with the
imperial crown. The same
kamelaukion was then placed...
- Holy
Crown of
Hungary of a few
decades later (also in Budapest) and the
kamelaukion of
Constance of Aragon, one of only
three surviving Byzantine crowns...
-
court title caesar in 638, in a
ceremony during which he
received the
kamelaukion cap
previously worn by his
older brother Heraclonas.
After the death...
- a
piece of
metalwork such as a crown,
votive crown, crux gemmata, or
kamelaukion, and are a
feature of
Early Medieval goldsmith work. On
crosses the pendilia...
-
gilded saddle clothes and
golden bridles and
bearing on his head the
kamelaukion, or diadem,
which the
sovereign alone was
authorized to wear and then...
- not in use in the
Ottoman Empire, it was
modeled after the
Byzantine kamelaukion (closed bonnet-like headdress),
similar to
those used in the Orthodox...
- [citation needed] The form of the Holy
Crown is
identical to that of the
kamelaukion-type
crowns with
closed tops, as
introduced in the
Byzantine Empire....
-
contemporary Byzantine Imperial crowns,
which had the
shape of a
closed cap (
kamelaukion). In turn,
Byzantine Emperor Justinian I "the Great" (483–565) had hoops...