| 221
BC |
When
Shih Huang Ti's Terra Cotta army is discovered in an underground
tomb in China, they're all wearing neckties. |
| 113
AD |
Early
Roman orators wear neckerchiefs to keep their vocal cords
warm. |
| 1660 |
In
1660, Louis XIV invites a Croatian military regime to Paris
to honor them for their victory over the Turks. Louis is as
captivated by the officers' brightly colored silk neckcloths
as he is by their valor. The first cravat, derived from the
word Croat, is modeled after their showy neckcloths. |
| 1692 |
Too
hurried to tie their cravats before entering the battle of
Steinkirke in Holland, French soldiers tuck the long, fringed
cloths into their buttonholes. The Steinkirke remains popular
into the 1800s. |
| 1784 |
Beau
Brummel, arguably the father of the dandy movement, was the
first to view his neckcloth, a lightly starched high cravat,
as a way to express individuality. The "cult of the neckcloth"
begins. |
| 1800's |
"Touching
another man's tie was a serious matter and, according to one
book of the period, grounds for a duel," according to the
Neckwear Association of America. |
| 1815 |
Napoleon's
defeat at Waterloo may have been linked to a change of cravat.
"The Emperor normally wore black silk," reports 19th century
fashion expert H. Le Blanc, "but at Waterloo, he wore a white
handkerchief, with a flowing bow." |
| 1837 |
As
cravats become easier to tie and wear, people start to call
them ties. |
| 1842 |
British
novelist Charles Dickens shocks Americans by wearing neckcloths
striped in scarlet, green and purple during his first U.S.
tour. |
| 1860 |
"Nobody
knows who did it, but one day a man unwound his scarf and
knotted it as if it were the reins of a four-in-hand carriage."
The modern long tie is born. |
| 1864 |
The
first mass-produced, "ready-made" tie is patented. Though
frowned upon in Europe, the tie develops a strong following
in Germany and the United States. |
| |
"A
well-tied tie is the first serious step in life," writes Romantic
poet and dandy Oscar Wilde, who wore knee breeches, a velvet
coat and a flowing green tie. |
| 1878 |
Dr.
Gustav Jaeger of Stuttgart in Germany states that dressing
in non-dyed wool, cravat included, is good for the health.
Writer George Bernard Shaw is among the first to boldly don
a "straight-from-the-sheep" Jaeger suit and tie in fashionable
London. |
| 1880 |
The
first club or "Old School" tie appears when members of the
Exeter College rowing team at Oxford University take the striped
bands off their rowing hats and tie them around their necks.
|
|
1900's |
Edward,
Prince of Wales (later known as the Duke of Windsor) leads
the trend away from formal cravats toward less formal soft
collars and four-in-hand ties. |
| 1914 |
"During
the first World War, a mass tie craze swept America. Everybody
from leather workers to guys on construction sites were wearing
ties, " says Myron Ackerman, a retired New York tie-man. |
| 1920's |
Cubist
painters Braque and Picasso inspire the colorful Art Deco
ties of the Jazz Age.The Macclesfield, a silk tie with a small,
regularly repeating design of circles, appears under the chins
of wealthy American men. |
|
1936 |
The
Duke of Windsor is credited with the invention of the Windsor,
a wide, triangular knot for a widespread shirt collar. |
| 1940's |
The
belly warmer - a wide, floppy tie adorned with hula dancers
and palm trees - catches on. The tie, originally introduced
as a joke, becomes an American style statement.Actors Bob
Hope, Alan Ladd and Danny Kay appear in advertisements for
ties. |
| 1947 |
A
Grover Chain Shirt Shop clerk pleads guilty to immorality
charges for selling ties featuring pictures of naked women.
|
| 1967 |
Hollywood
heartthrob Warren Beatty stars in the movie Bonnie and Clyde,
reviving the American gangster trend of wearing white ties
on dark shirts. |
| 1970 |
Elvis
Presley heralds the age of disco by abandoning his straight
black tie in favor of a loose neckerchief or, sometimes, a
kipper, a vast tie with a huge knot. |
| 1971 |
The
Bolo, a leather or string tie fastened with a silver or turquoise
sliding device, is named the official state tie of Arizona.
|
| 1980's |
Ronald
Reagan sports a Windsor throughout his presidency. |
| 1983 |
Skinny
leather ties were worn on paisley or pin-striped shirts. |
| 1986 |
Ralph
Marlin ushers in the conversational necktie trend by producing
a tie in the shape of a fish. |
| 1998 |
Bill
Clinton's tie makes the headlines not for its style, but because
it's a gift from a White House intern named Monica Lewinsky. |