Burukoa


CAPTION
Basque woman wearing burukoa - Bizkaia antzinako burukoa - at Butron castle, Gatika, Pais Vasco, 03 June 2006
DESCRIPTION
(N.B. The below text is a translation from a leaflet displayed at Castillo Bruton, Gatika. If you have a better descriptive text or reference please let me know.)
The unusual style of the Basque burukoa dates from the sixteenth century and is a style of womens´ hat unique to Pais Vasco (Basque Country), northern Spain.
The style of the burukoa (the word for headress in Euskara, the Basque language) emerged from the way Basque women wore their hair.
In the sixteenth century the single women of Pais Vasco were distinct from the rest of the country in that they wore their heads uncovered and their hair cut cropped very short leaving only a hair bun at the front.
These hairstyles brought much attention to the women of Pais Vasco, but their original headdresses which they displayed generated even more attention to them. A framework of wicker was made and over various lengths of different linens were wound, giving them beautiful and unusual shapes. Different regions of Pais Vasco had their own distinctive style of burukoa.
The resulting burukoas typically had a very pointed horn shape, with a clear phallic meaning. Unsurprisingly this style of headdress was not appreciated by the church authorities who condemned their use and demanded that the burukoa be covered with veils.
500 years later the Basque tradition of the burukoa is still maintained in Pais Vasco at events such as the medieval fair held at Castillo Bruton, near Gatika, some 20 miles from Bilbao.

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