Unmasking The Dark History Of The Moretta

They looked decidedly eerie, almost appearing as though someone had cut out the person's face.

Vintage & Historical
3 min
Ripley's Believe It or Not!
Ripley's Believe It or Not!
Unmasking The Dark History Of The Moretta
All stories
Vintage & Historical

If you’ve been invited to a masquerade ball this year and want to wear something that screams “creepy-casual,” consider adding a moretta to your ensemble.

Old School Sunscreen

When we think of carnival masks of Venice, Rio, or New Orleans, we think of bright colors and ornate designs. But, if you go waaaay down to the opposite end of the spectrum, you’ll find the moretta, a woman’s mask of plain black with no sparkle or flare, and no opening for the nose or mouth. In artists’ depictions, they look decidedly eerie; it almost appears as though someone has cut out the person’s face.

Pietro_Longhi_1751_rhino.jpg

Of all the styles of masks worn at the time, the moretta was as sleek and simple as could be. Likely made of a material like cardstock or cardboard. It would have been waxed, painted over, or had black fabric affixed to it for a blank effect.

Popular in Paris and Venice during the mid-to-late 17th century, the moretta was an oval-shaped, black mask of French origin. It disguised the lady who wore it. It also stayed put with a button held between the teeth, rendering the wearer mute. It’s no wonder the moretta , meaning “dark,” was also sometimes called the “ servetta muta ,” or “mute servant.”

From the late 1600s until about 1700, women in Paris had a tradition of covering their faces in public. “Women didn’t always wear hats, so they used masks, including the moretta partially to keep their fashionably pale skin safe from the sun,” says   James H. Johnson , Professor of History at Boston University and author of Venice Incognito: Masks in the Seren Republic .

The plain, dark mask accentuated the paleness it helped protect. A moretta might be also worn on a visit to a convent for the sake of modesty. And, of course, the quiet created by that button.

Hiding In Plain Sight

Masks in Paris at the time were also worn as a “protection against charges of being immodest,” Johnson says. It was rare for an upper-class woman to go walking in public alone but, he points out, not rare for prostitutes. A lady could walk out in public in a mask and not be seen as being that kind of girl.

You would think that women at this time would see the near-literal buttoning of their lip and “invisibility” in public as an inconvenience. However, for most, being covered up and unheard almost gave them a bit more freedom.

Masks could be “about protecting a psychic space when you don’t have physical space,” Johnson says, and that it was somewhat akin to the modern habit of “wearing sunglasses, not to disguise ourselves but to create a kind of psychic distance so that we don’t have to acknowledge people if we don’t want to.”

moretta event

Meanwhile, Venice in the 1660s and 1670s was seeing the dawn of new social spaces. From enclosed theaters, and public cafes to gambling halls. Venice had a rigid social hierarchy. “The two or three percent of the population who are noble did not associate closely with or talk to commoners.” Now, suddenly, there were public spaces in which the mingling of classes could occur.

In a sartorial move, likely unique to Venice, “people began to wear masks in public as a way of facilitating being very close to a different social status,” in these new class-fluid spaces, Johnson says. Aristocrats could drink and gamble alongside absolute nobodies and no one would ever know.

Who Was That Masked Woman?

young girl holding a mask
Charles-Antoine Coypel: Young Girl Holding a Mask

Venetian painter Pietro Longhi often showed masked figures in his work, including women in morettas, as in The Rhinoceros and The Meeting of the Procuratore and His Wife , which, as the University of Mary Washington blog observes, shows a lady removing her moretta for reasons unknown. As with the mysterious moretta, there’s some fun to be had in this little bit of mystery.

About The Author

Ripley's Believe It or Not!

Ripley's Believe It or Not!

Step into the world of Ripley’s Believe It or Not!, where truth is always stranger than fiction! Bui…

By this author

Real-Life Vampire Lore: Myths and Truths That Will Make Your Skin Crawl

Real-Life Vampire Lore: Myths and Truths That Will Make Your Skin Crawl

The Government Once Nuked a Bunch of File Cabinets

The Government Once Nuked a Bunch of File Cabinets

 Diving Into a Historic Election Relic

Diving Into a Historic Election Relic

Read All Their Stories

Or Explore Our Categories

Have an Amazing Story?

At Ripley’s, we’re always in search of the unbelievable – maybe it’s you! Show us your talents. Tell us a strange story or a weird fact. Share your unbelievable art with us. Maybe even sell us something that could become a part of Ripley’s collection!

Have an Amazing Story?

Read More Ripley's

Get lost in a vortex of weird and wonderful stories! Ripley’s twenty-first edition annual book is full of all-new, all-true stories from around the world.

Dare to Discover book
Buy Now
Swirling Pinstripe backdrop
Ripley's Cartoon of the Day

November 22, 2024

Cartoon of the Day

Ghent, Belgium, has a weekly "veggie day," where meat is not consumed.

Ripley's Cartoon of the Day

Robert Ripley began the Believe It or Not! cartoon in 1918. Today, Kieran Castaño is the eighth artist to continue the legacy of illustrating the world's longest-running syndicated cartoon!