The cardigan — that most domestic and comforting of garments, the button-front knitted jacket — takes its name from one of the most controversial military figures of the nineteenth century: James Thomas Brudenell, 7th Earl of Cardigan (1797–1868), who led the disastrous Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava during the Crimean War. The association between a spectacularly reckless cavalry officer and a cozy knitted sweater is one of the more piquant ironies in the history of fashion etymology.
The Earl of Cardigan was a man of extreme contrasts. Born into enormous wealth and privilege, he purchased his way to command of the 11th Hussars and became notorious for his arrogance, his temper, and his insistence on sartorial perfection in his regiment. He fought a duel with a fellow officer, was court-martialed (and acquitted on a technicality), and was widely regarded as one of the most difficult personalities in the British Army. Yet it was his leadership of the Charge of the Light Brigade on October 25, 1854 — a suicidal frontal assault on Russian artillery positions
The garment associated with his name was a knitted wool waistcoat or jacket, buttoned up the front, that Cardigan and his officers reportedly wore during the Crimean campaign to stay warm in the bitter cold of the Russian winter. Whether Cardigan himself designed the garment, merely popularized it, or simply lent his name to an already-existing style is unclear from the historical record. What is certain is that the returning soldiers of the Crimean War brought the fashion back to Britain, and by the late 1850s and 1860s, the garment was widely known as a "cardigan" or "cardigan jacket."
The name "Cardigan" itself has Welsh origins. The earldom takes its name from Cardigan (Welsh: Aberteifi), a town in west Wales situated at the mouth of the River Teifi. The English name "Cardigan" derives from the Welsh "Ceredigion," the name of the surrounding region, which in turn commemorates Ceredig, a fifth-century Welsh prince who was the son of the semi-legendary Cunedda. The etymological chain thus runs from a post-Roman Welsh chieftain through a Welsh town, a British earldom, a Crimean battlefield, and into the global
The cardigan's evolution from military garment to civilian staple took several decades. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it was primarily a men's garment, associated with sporting and casual wear. Coco Chanel's adoption and transformation of the cardigan in the 1920s — reimagined as a women's garment in jersey fabric, worn casually over the shoulders — was a turning point. The cardigan became a symbol of relaxed elegance
In the latter twentieth century, the cardigan acquired additional cultural resonances. Mr. Rogers's cardigan became an icon of gentle, reassuring domesticity in American television. Kurt Cobain's oversized, threadbare cardigans became symbols of grunge anti-fashion. Taylor Swift's 2020 song "Cardigan" renewed the garment's cultural visibility for a new generation. Each era
Related terms include "cardie" or "cardi" (British informal), and the compound "cardigan jacket" (now somewhat redundant, since "cardigan" alone implies the jacket form). The word has been adopted into numerous languages: French "cardigan," German "Kardigan," Japanese カーディガン (kādigan). In each case, the word carries no echo of cavalry charges or Crimean winters — only the quiet comfort of knitted wool.