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Encyclopedia > Parasol
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Umbrella

An umbrella is a device used for temporary shade or shelter from precipitation. They can be made by stretching a fabric or other material over a wire frame. Umbrellas carried by hand are now usually used as rain shields, although their first use was for shielding from the sun; however, as tans became more sociably acceptable, this usage declined.


An umbrella made for protection from the sun, is called a parasol. These are often meant to be fixed to one point and often used with patio tables or other outdoor furniture, or on the beach for shelter from the sun.


The word "umbrella" is from the Latin word "umbra" for shade or shadow.


"Brolly" is a slang word for umbrella, used often in Britain (both the word, and the object).


History

Depictions on ancient artifacts provide evidence that umbrellas have been in existence for over four thousand years. The civilizations of ancient Assyria, Egypt, Greece, and China all used umbrellas. It was not until the 16th century that the trend spread to Europe.

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Parasol girl
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An umbrella doing its stuff

In England, umbrellas were only used by women until the practice was popularised by Jonas Hanway (1712-86). Having noted the custom in Portugal, in the 1750s he started to carry an umbrella regularly in London, and continued to do so for thirty years despite derision. Another pioneering Londoner was John MacDonald, who from 1778 used a silk umbrella when it rained. The use of "Hanways" by English gentlemen slowly spread, so that by 1790, their pioneering efforts had helped lift the English taboo against men carrying umbrellas.


Chinese umbrellas have traditionally been made of either oilpaper, or silk on a bamboo frame. Victorian era umbrellas had frames of wood or baleen, but these devices were expensive and hard to fold when wet. Samuel Fox invented the steel-ribbed umbrella in 1852. Modern designs usually employ a telescoping steel trunk. New materials such as cotton, plastic film and nylon often replace the original silk. They now are available in compact collapsible designs.


Related

  • In Unicode, the "Umbrella" symbol is U+2602; the "Umbrella with rain drops" is U+2614:
☂ ☔
  • The expression "umbrella term" means a word that provides a superset or grouping of related concepts. Thus cryptology is an umbrella term that encompasses cryptography and cryptoanalysis.

External Link

  • Full text of Umbrellas and their History (http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/6674) by William Sangster, from Project Gutenberg.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Sun parasols and parasol umbrella history (829 words)
The parasol is most often thought of with Victorian society in England and the U.S. Perhaps the chief reason for its popularity at the time was the Victorian admiration (or obsession) for a fair complexion.
While parasols have long been used by middle-aged and elderly women for protective purposes, it is only this year that young women have fully seized upon parasols as a fashion accessory.
Once upon a time, parasols were typically made of white or pink lacy fabric that gave an appearance of coolness; by contrast, the “in” color for parasols is jet fl.
Parasol Stars - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (444 words)
The player is armed with a parasol, a kind of umbrella.
Parachuting - The parasol can be used in the manner of a parachute, to slow the player's descent through the air.
The parasol can hold more than one droplet at once; if four are held, they merge into a large droplet with a special power.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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