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As is natural in the oldest university in the United Kingdom, the University of Oxford has a long tradition of academic dress.
Academic dress is still worn very often in Oxford, and every undergraduate goes in his or her first week to buy a gown, cap and white bow tie (for men) or black ribbon (for women) for the purpose of enrolment in the University (known as matriculation).
In most colleges, gowns are worn to:
Gowns and caps are worn to disciplinary hearings in the Proctors' Court.
In addition, gowns are worn with cap, hood (for graduates), and sub-fusc to:
The gowns in use in Oxford can be divided into two basic shapes. All gowns are open-fronted, except for the Doctors' convocation habit which is closed at the front.
The clerical-type gown has no collar, but instead has the voluminous material of its back and sleeves gathered into a yoke.
Gowns of the same basic shape are worn by barristers (see court dress), preachers and bishops in the Church of England.
The lay-type gown derives from a garment fashionable in Elizabethan times. It is less voluminous than the clerical-type gown, and has a flap collar and long closed sleeves with arm slits just above the elbow.
Gowns of the same basic shape are worn by solicitors, Queen's Counsel, court ushers, the Speaker of the House of Commons, the Chancellor of the ExchequerThe Chancellor of the Exchequer is the ancient title held by the British cabinet minister whose responsibilities are akin to the posts of Minister for Finance or Secretary of the Treasury in other jurisdictions. The third oldest major state office in Engl, and the Lord ChancellorThe Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain or Lord Chancellor and in former times Chancellor of England is one of the most senior and important functionaries in the government of the United Kingdom. He is a Great Officer of State, and is appointed by the S.
Hoods in Oxford are of three shapes. Doctors' hoods are scarlet in the Oxford full shape. All other hoods can be either in the Burgon shape or the Oxford simple shape.
Generally hoods are worn whenever sub-fusc is worn, but sometimes it is worn with an ordinary tie, e.g. by a lecturer at a public lecture.
Men wear a mortarboardA mortarboard is an item of academic headgear consisting of a horizontal square board fixed upon a skull-cap, with a tassel attached to the centre. It is often termed trencher in the UK and Australia; in the U. it is usually referred to more generically a (also known as a square), which is not worn indoors, except by the Chancellor, Vice-Chancellor and Proctors. When meeting the Vice-Chancellor, Proctors, or other senior official of the university in the street, it is traditional for a man to touch or raise his cap. In practice few people wear their caps nowadays, and instead carry their caps on occasions where caps are required.
Women may choose between the mortarboard or the soft cap. The soft cap is not removed indoors, although the mortarboard may now be removed or left on indoors at the wearer's discretion.
Doctors in the lay faculties (i.e. those except Divinity and Philosophy) wear Tudor bonnet s, which are round and made of velvet.