Lovelock (hair)


A Lovelock was popular amongst European "men of fashion" from the end of the 16th century until well into the 17th century. The lovelock was a long lock of hair, often plaited and made to rest over the left shoulder to show devotion to a loved one.
Robin Bryer, author of The History of Hair: Fashion and Fantasy Down the Ages, speculates that the lovelock may have originated as an alternative to the love token worn by knights during the medieval period.

Christian IV of Denmark wore a lovelock possibly because of medical condition plica polonica, and others in his court copied it to make it into a Danish court fashion. His brother-in-law James I of England wore a lovelock, and at the court of his son, Charles I many courtiers wore them in the French fashion. Charles I can be seen wearing one in the Triple portrait by Antony Van Dyck.
with a long lovelock.
William Prynne, a puritan pamphleteer, wrote Health's Sickness. The Unloveliness of Lovelocks, in which he states that for men to wear their hair long was "unseemly and unlawful unto Christians", while it was "mannish, unnatural, impudent, and unchristian" for women to cut it short. He related the story of a nobleman who was dangerously ill, and who, on his recovery, "declared publicly his detestation of his effeminate, fantastic lovelock, which he then sensibly perceived to be but a cord of vanity, by which he had given the Devil holdfast to lead him at his pleasure, and who would never resign his prey as long as he nourished this unlovely bush", and so he ordered the barber to cut it off. Thomas Hall wrote a pamphlet The Loathsomnesse of Long Haire.... in which he also attacked the fashion. These different views on fashion are in part reflected in the uncomplimentary nicknames the two sides gave each other during the English Civil War: the Royalists called their enemies Roundheads while the Parliamentarians called the Royalists Cavaliers.