All Object Lessons
Contested Heritage

The Pith Helmet: The Same Hat, Two Stories

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, ethics, art, citizenship, language
Core question How does the same object — a lightweight tropical helmet — become a symbol of colonial domination for one set of people and a symbol of anti-colonial resistance for another, and what does this teach us about how objects carry meaning?
A pith helmet of the kind worn by European colonial administrators and soldiers from the 1840s onwards. A descendant of the Filipino salakot, this design became a symbol of European imperialism — and, in green-covered Vietnamese versions, an anti-colonial symbol. Photo: ing. David Rimeš / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
Introduction

A pith helmet is a lightweight, dome-shaped helmet with a wide brim, designed for shading the head and face from tropical sun. Its body is made of pith — the dried stems of certain tropical plants — or of cork. The body is covered in cotton cloth, traditionally beige (khaki) or white. A narrow band of cloth called a puggaree wraps around the base of the crown. The whole helmet weighs only about 300 grams. It is much lighter and much cooler than the leather or metal helmets that came before it. The pith helmet has a complicated history. The deep origin is the salakot — a traditional Filipino sun hat used by indigenous peoples of the Philippines long before Europeans arrived. The Spanish in the Philippines adopted the salakot (which they called the 'salacot') for their colonial military in the 18th century. The British in India then developed their own version from the 1840s onwards, using the pith of the Indian sola plant — and this is the version that became famous. By the 1880s, pith helmets were worn by European colonial soldiers and administrators across India, Africa, South-East Asia, the Caribbean, and the Pacific. They appeared in the Anglo-Zulu War, in the Sudan campaigns, in the Boer War, in the trenches of Gallipoli, in the British Raj, in French Indochina, in the Belgian Congo, in German South-West Africa, in Italian Libya. The pith helmet became one of the most visible symbols of European imperialism. It was worn by colonial governors at official ceremonies. It was worn by British officers conducting campaigns against indigenous resistance. It appeared in colonial-era novels and films. The image of the white man in a pith helmet became a visual shorthand for European power in the tropics. Then, after the Second World War, the helmet was adopted by an entirely different group of people — the Vietnamese People's Army, the army of the Vietnamese independence movement led by Ho Chi Minh. The Viet Minh copied the design from the French colonial helmet, covered it in jungle green cloth, and made it their standard military headwear. The green pith helmet — mũ cối in Vietnamese — was worn through the First Indochina War against the French (1946-1954) and through the Vietnam War against the United States (which Vietnamese call the American War, 1955-1975). It became, and remains, a symbol of Vietnamese national identity and resistance to foreign invasion. The same hat. Two completely different stories. To one set of people, it represents colonial domination. To another, it represents successful resistance to that very domination. This lesson asks how the same object can carry such different meanings, and what this teaches us about how objects relate to history, identity, and memory.

The object
Origin
The deep origin is the salakot — a traditional Filipino sun hat made of woven bamboo, rattan, or other fibres, used by indigenous peoples of the Philippines for centuries. The Spanish in the Philippines adopted the salakot (which they called the 'salacot') for their colonial military in the 18th century. The British in India developed their own version from the 1840s onwards, using the dried pith of the Indian sola plant (Aeschynomene aspera) for the body — giving the helmet its English name. Other European colonial powers — France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium — adopted versions of the helmet through the second half of the 19th century.
Period
In wide use for about 100 years as colonial headwear, from approximately 1840 to 1945. Continues today in three main forms: as ceremonial headwear in some Commonwealth military and police units (Royal Marines, Royal Gibraltar Regiment, some Caribbean police forces, Australian and Canadian Army bands); as standard service dress of the Vietnamese People's Army (and in Vietnamese civilian life); and as a tourist or fashion item in some tropical countries (controversially).
Made of
The classic pith helmet is built around a shaped body of lightweight plant material — either pith (the dried inner stems of certain tropical plants, including the Indian sola plant Aeschynomene aspera and various African shola plants) or cork. The pith or cork shell is covered in cotton cloth, usually beige (khaki) or white. A linen puggaree wraps around the base of the crown. The interior is lined with a leather or cotton sweat band. Some military versions had decorative metal fittings — a brass spike or ball on the top, regimental badges on the front. The whole helmet typically weighs only about 250 to 350 grams.
Size
A typical adult pith helmet is about 25 to 30 centimetres wide (including the brim) and about 15 centimetres tall. The brim is usually 4 to 8 centimetres wide. Light enough that wearers often noticed how little weight it added compared with leather or metal helmets.
Number of objects
Tens of millions were produced from the 1840s to the 1940s by makers in Britain (Hawkes of London, Christys' of London), India, France, Germany, and the United States. Pith helmets are widely held in military museums worldwide and are commonly found in private antique collections. The Vietnamese pith helmet (mũ cối) is produced in large numbers today — millions are in use in Vietnam at any given time, both military and civilian.
Where it is now
Museum collections worldwide hold colonial-era pith helmets — the Imperial War Museum in London, the National Army Museum in London, the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, the Musée de l'Armée in Paris, the Bundeswehr Military History Museum in Dresden, and many others. The Royal Marines and the Royal Gibraltar Regiment continue to wear white Wolseley pith helmets on ceremonial occasions. In Vietnam, the green-covered pith helmet is everyday military and civilian wear. Some hats remain in family heirlooms from colonial-era ancestors.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The pith helmet has been a symbol of European imperialism for nearly two centuries and is still seen as offensive when worn by non-Vietnamese people in tropical countries. How will you teach the colonial history honestly without being either dismissive or sensationalist?
  2. The Vietnamese pith helmet (mũ cối) is the same basic design used by anti-colonial forces. How will you draw out this complication — that the same object has been used by both the coloniser and the colonised, in completely different ways?
  3. Some students may have family connections to colonial history (as colonised people, as descendants of colonial administrators, as people from countries that were neither). How will you teach in a way that respects all of these perspectives?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine the British Army in India in the 1840s. British soldiers there are wearing the standard British uniform of the time — wool tunics, heavy leather boots, and either felt shakos or metal-and-leather helmets. The uniforms were designed for European campaigns in temperate climates. In India, they are catastrophic. A wool tunic in the Indian summer is like wearing a portable oven. The temperature on the Indian plains in May reaches 45 degrees Celsius. A felt shako traps heat against the skull. Heatstroke is a leading cause of British military deaths in India — more soldiers die from heat-related illness than from combat. Officers worry that they are losing more men to the climate than to any enemy. The British Army in India begins experimenting with alternatives. They look at what local people wear — and they notice the salakot, a wide-brimmed hat made of woven plant fibre, used across Asia for centuries. They look at the Spanish military's adaptation of the salakot in the Philippines. They look at what the East India Company has been making for its own personnel. Slowly, a new design emerges — a lightweight dome-shaped helmet built around the pith of the Indian sola plant, covered in cloth, with a wide brim to shade the face. By the 1860s the new helmet is standard issue for British soldiers serving in India. By the 1870s it is being worn across the empire — in Africa, in the Caribbean, in the Pacific. By the 1880s it has become the visual signature of the British colonial soldier and administrator. Why did Europeans adopt the pith helmet for their colonial campaigns?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

For very practical reasons. The pith helmet was light (about 300 grams), well-ventilated (with a vent at the top), and well-shaded (with a wide brim). It worked. It reduced heatstroke. It allowed European soldiers and administrators to function in tropical climates where their previous uniforms had been killing them. Strong answers will see that the helmet was not chosen for its symbolism. It was chosen for its physics. The symbolism came later, accumulated over decades of use, until the helmet stood for the people who wore it as much as it stood for keeping the sun off. End by noting that this is true of many objects associated with particular groups. A piece of equipment chosen for practical reasons becomes a marker of identity over time. The British Army in India did not set out to invent a visual symbol of imperialism. It set out to keep soldiers alive in 45-degree heat. The symbol emerged from a century of use.

2
From the 1860s to the 1940s, the pith helmet was everywhere in the European colonial world. The British wore it in India (where the colonial period lasted until 1947), in Africa (Sudan, Egypt, South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, Tanganyika, Rhodesia, Sierra Leone, Gold Coast, and others), in the Caribbean, in Burma, in Malaya, in Hong Kong, and in the Pacific. The Royal Navy wore a white Wolseley helmet on tropical service. British colonial governors wore the pith helmet with a 10-inch red and white swan-feather plume for formal occasions. The French wore versions in French Indochina (today's Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia), in North Africa (Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco), and in West and Central Africa (Senegal, Mali, Côte d'Ivoire, Niger, Chad, and others). The French version was usually lighter in colour and had a slightly different shape. The Germans wore the Tropenhelm in their African colonies — German East Africa (today's Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi), German South-West Africa (today's Namibia), Cameroon, Togo. The Italians wore it in Libya, Eritrea, Somalia, and Ethiopia. The Dutch wore it in the Dutch East Indies (today's Indonesia). The Belgians wore it in the Congo. The Portuguese wore it in Angola, Mozambique, and other African colonies. The Spanish wore it in their remaining colonies. The Americans wore versions in the Philippines (taken from Spain in 1898), in Panama, in the Pacific. Practically every European-administered tropical territory in the world had pith-helmeted men running it. The helmet appeared in countless colonial-era photographs, novels, and films. The image of the white man in a pith helmet — riding a horse, supervising a plantation, leading a punitive expedition, presiding over a court, declaiming from a verandah — became a visual signature of the imperial age. This is the period when the pith helmet became a symbol of something it had not been designed to symbolise. The helmet itself was just a hat. But what was done in the helmet — the conquests, the killings, the dispossessions, the racial hierarchies, the extractions of wealth — gave the hat its later meaning. What does it mean that the helmet 'became a symbol'?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

It means that millions of people, across many generations, came to associate the object with the actions of the people who wore it. The pith helmet itself did not change. But what people had seen done by the men wearing them — by 1940, several generations of Africans, Asians, and others had seen pith-helmeted figures as the public face of European power. The hat could not be separated from this history. Strong answers will see that this is how symbols accumulate. Nothing about red, white, and blue stripes is inherently American — the colours and the pattern got their meaning from American history. Nothing about a swastika is inherently Nazi — the symbol existed for thousands of years before the Nazi Party adopted it, and means very different things in Hindu and Buddhist contexts. Symbols are made by use, not by design. End by noting that this means symbols can also change. The same object can come to mean something new, if it is used in new ways by new people. This is exactly what happened with the pith helmet in Vietnam — which we are about to discuss.

3
In 1945, at the end of the Second World War, the French returned to Indochina — the colony they had governed since the 1880s — intending to resume colonial rule. The Vietnamese had a different idea. A Vietnamese independence movement had been building for decades. The leader of the most effective faction was Ho Chi Minh, head of the Viet Minh — the League for the Independence of Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh had declared an independent Democratic Republic of Vietnam on 2 September 1945, while the French were still distant. The French came back. War followed. The Viet Minh army — and its successor, the People's Army of Vietnam — was outgunned and outequipped. They had limited industrial capacity. They could not produce the heavy military equipment of the French. They could, however, produce simple uniforms and headwear. They looked at what the French had used for tropical service — the lightweight pith helmet. They copied the design. They covered it in jungle green cloth instead of beige. They added a small red enamel star with the symbol of the Vietnamese state. The mũ cối — the Vietnamese pith helmet — was born. It became the standard military headwear of the Vietnamese army, and it has remained so. Through the First Indochina War against the French (1946-1954), through the long Vietnam War (Vietnamese call it the American War, 1955-1975), through the post-war decades, through to today, the green pith helmet is what Vietnamese soldiers wear. It is also widely worn by Vietnamese civilians — by farmers, by motorbike riders, by students in compulsory military training, by older men on the streets of Hanoi. It is sold in markets across Vietnam. It is, in Vietnam, an ordinary object of daily life. Why did the Vietnamese take the colonial helmet for their own?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. First, the helmet was a good design. It worked. The same physics that had made it useful for French colonial troops made it useful for Vietnamese resistance fighters — light, well-ventilated, with a wide brim for shade and rain. Second, taking the coloniser's tool and using it against them is a powerful gesture. The Vietnamese were not just copying the French; they were saying 'we will use your own tools to defeat you'. Third, by re-colouring and re-marking the helmet, the Vietnamese made it their own. The green cloth, the red star — these were not French. They were Vietnamese. The hat was the same, but the meaning was new. Strong answers will see that this is a profound moment in the history of symbols. The Vietnamese did not destroy the colonial hat or refuse to wear anything like it. They took it, modified it, and gave it a new meaning. End by noting that this is one of the most powerful things that can happen with a symbol of oppression — for the oppressed to take it back, repurpose it, and make it stand for the opposite of what it once meant. The mũ cối today is unmistakably Vietnamese. It is the helmet of the Vietnamese army, the Vietnamese farmer, the Vietnamese resistance to foreign invasion. It is no longer a French object. It is a Vietnamese one.

4
Today, the pith helmet has a complicated status in different parts of the world. In Britain, the white Wolseley pith helmet is still worn by the Royal Marines for ceremonial occasions, by the Royal Gibraltar Regiment as part of their summer uniform, by some military bands, and by the Royal Hong Kong Police aide-de-camp at the 1997 handover ceremony in Hong Kong — the last time the helmet appeared at a ceremony marking the end of British imperial rule. Some Australian and Canadian military bands wear it. Some Caribbean police forces inherit it from colonial-era kit. In Vietnam, the green mũ cối is everywhere — on soldiers, on motorbike riders, on farmers, on construction workers. Production is robust. New helmets are made every day. The helmet is not a relic; it is a living object of contemporary Vietnamese life. Visitors to Hanoi can buy one in any market. In former colonial countries that are not Vietnam, the situation is different. A white visitor wearing a pith helmet in many African countries today would be seen as making a deliberately offensive gesture — invoking colonial-era postures of authority. In 2019, there was a controversy when several British politicians, including a candidate for the Conservative Party leadership, were photographed wearing pith helmets on visits to African countries. Critics pointed out that this evoked exactly the imagery of colonial oversight that the helmet had carried for a century. Defenders said it was just a sun hat. Both views are honest about different aspects of the same object. In fashion, the helmet appears occasionally — sometimes in safari-themed outfits, sometimes in costume parties, sometimes in self-consciously colonial nostalgia. Each appearance tends to generate debate. Wearing one in Africa or Asia generally generates more debate than wearing one in Europe or North America. Why does the same hat cause such different reactions in different places?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the meaning of an object depends on who is reading it and where. A pith helmet in Hanoi today is a Vietnamese object — it is read as Vietnamese, it means Vietnamese identity, the British colonial history is largely irrelevant to it. A pith helmet on a British politician on a state visit to Kenya is a different object — it is read against the actual history of British rule in Kenya, the violence of the Mau Mau uprising and its suppression, the displacement of Kenyan farmers, the legacy of empire that ordinary Kenyans live with today. The object is the same. The reading is completely different. Strong answers will see that this is true of many objects. A flag, a uniform, a building, a statue, a piece of music — each can mean very different things in different times and places. Symbols are not fixed. They live in the readings of the people who see them. End by noting that this is why context matters so much when it comes to objects associated with painful histories. The honest thing is not to ask whether the hat is 'really' offensive or 'really' innocent in some abstract sense, but to ask what wearing it in this place, in this moment, in front of these people, is communicating. Symbols speak in context. The pith helmet says different things in different rooms.

What this object teaches

A pith helmet is a lightweight, dome-shaped helmet with a wide brim, designed for tropical sun. Its body is made of pith — the dried stems of tropical plants like the Indian sola plant — or of cork, covered in cotton cloth. It weighs only about 300 grams. The deep origin is the salakot, a traditional Filipino sun hat used by indigenous peoples long before European arrival. The Spanish in the Philippines adopted the salakot for their colonial military in the 18th century. The British in India developed their own version from the 1840s onwards, and by the 1860s it was standard issue for British soldiers in tropical service. By 1880, every major European colonial power was using a version of the helmet — British in India and across Africa, French in Indochina and North and West Africa, Germans in their African colonies, Italians in Libya and Ethiopia, Dutch in Indonesia, Belgians in the Congo. The Royal Navy wore a white Wolseley helmet in tropical service. British colonial governors wore the helmet with a 10-inch red and white swan-feather plume for formal occasions. The pith helmet appeared in the Anglo-Zulu War, the Sudan campaigns, the Boer War, Gallipoli, the British Raj in India, French Indochina, the Belgian Congo, and German South-West Africa. It became one of the most visible symbols of European imperialism in the 19th and 20th centuries. After the Second World War, the same design was adopted by the Vietnamese People's Army. The Viet Minh — the Vietnamese independence movement led by Ho Chi Minh — copied the French colonial helmet, covered it in jungle green cloth, and added a red enamel star. The mũ cối became and remains the standard military and civilian headwear of Vietnam, worn through the First Indochina War against the French (1946-1954), the Vietnam War (1955-1975), and to the present day. The same helmet design carries opposite meanings — colonial domination for those who see it on European officers, anti-colonial resistance for those who see it on Vietnamese soldiers. The helmet is still worn by the Royal Marines and some Commonwealth military bands for ceremonial occasions. In former colonies that are not Vietnam, wearing a pith helmet as a non-local visitor is widely considered offensive, especially for white Westerners in African or Asian countries — it evokes the imagery of colonial supervision. The pith helmet teaches that symbols are made by use, not by design — and that the same object can mean very different things to different communities, depending on what those communities have experienced.

DateEventWhat changed
Centuries beforeSalakot used by indigenous peoples of the PhilippinesThe basic design exists long before Europeans arrive
18th centurySpanish adopt salakot (salacot) for colonial militaryThe first European use of the design
1840sBritish in India develop pith helmet from Indian sola plantThe famous British colonial form appears
1879Pith helmets worn in the Anglo-Zulu WarThe helmet becomes part of the visual image of British conquest
1900Wolseley pattern helmet officially sealed for the British ArmyThe classic British pith helmet design is standardised
1915Pith helmets worn at GallipoliThe helmet in First World War tropical campaigns
1946Viet Minh adopt French colonial pith helmet design in greenThe mũ cối is born; the symbol changes sides
1947-1975Vietnamese forces wear green pith helmet through wars of independenceThe helmet becomes a symbol of anti-colonial resistance
TodayCeremonial use in UK Commonwealth; everyday use in Vietnam; controversial when worn by Westerners in former coloniesThe same object, different meanings in different places
Key words
Salakot
The traditional Filipino sun hat, made of woven bamboo, rattan, or other plant fibres, with a wide brim. Used by indigenous peoples of the Philippines for centuries before European contact. The Spanish in the Philippines adopted the salakot for their colonial military in the 18th century (calling it the 'salacot'), and the basic design influenced the later British, French, and other European pith helmets.
Example: The salakot is still made and worn in some parts of the Philippines today, particularly for outdoor work and ceremonial occasions. The Spanish version added a cloth cover and a chin strap. The British version replaced the woven fibre body with sola pith, making it lighter.
Sola pith
The dried inner stems of the Indian sola plant (Aeschynomene aspera), a swamp plant native to South and South-East Asia. Sola pith is extremely lightweight, holds its shape, can be carved, and is breathable. It gave the pith helmet its English name. African shola plants were used similarly. Most modern 'pith helmets' are actually made of cork or modern materials, not pith.
Example: Real sola pith helmets are now rare; the plant is in shorter supply and synthetic materials are easier to use. The Royal Marines' modern white Wolseley helmets are made of fibreglass, not pith. The Vietnamese mũ cối is typically made of compressed paper or cork.
Wolseley helmet
The classic British military pith helmet design, named after Field Marshal The 1st Viscount Wolseley. Officially sealed (approved) in 1900 and used by the British Army from 1899 to 1948. Distinguished by its swept-back brim, six-segment crown, and front-and-back peaks. Still worn ceremonially by the Royal Marines and some Commonwealth military units.
Example: The Wolseley helmet appeared in the Sudan campaigns of the late 1890s, in the Boer War (1899-1902), at Gallipoli (1915), in the African and Middle Eastern campaigns of both World Wars, and in many colonial postings. The Royal Marines' modern dress version is essentially the same design, made of fibreglass, with a brass ornament at the top.
Mũ cối
The Vietnamese pith helmet. Adopted by the Viet Minh from French colonial designs in 1946, covered in jungle green cloth, with a small red enamel star bearing the Vietnamese state symbol. Worn through the First Indochina War (1946-1954), the Vietnam War (1955-1975), and to the present day. Standard headwear of the Vietnamese People's Army and a common civilian item in Vietnam.
Example: The mũ cối is worn by Vietnamese soldiers on parade and on duty. It is also worn by Vietnamese farmers, motorbike riders, and construction workers. In Hanoi, vendors on Le Duan Street sell mũ cối along with other Vietnamese military memorabilia. A new helmet costs only a few dollars.
Puggaree
A length of cloth wound around the base of a pith helmet, originally adapted from the Indian Hindi word 'pagri' meaning 'turban'. The puggaree was both decorative and practical — it absorbed sweat from the headband and could be unwound and used as a cleaning cloth, bandage, or signal. Different regiments wore different puggaree patterns to identify themselves.
Example: A British infantry pith helmet typically had a plain khaki puggaree wound several times around the base of the crown. Cavalry regiments often had folded or striped puggarees. The Royal Marines puggaree is plain white, with a navy-blue edging on the top.
Contested heritage
Cultural objects whose meaning is honestly contested — read very differently by different communities, often because of histories of conquest, slavery, or colonial domination. Contested heritage includes the pith helmet but also Confederate statues, colonial-era museum collections (like the Benin Bronzes), and many other objects. There is no single right answer about how to handle contested heritage; communities and societies work through it case by case.
Example: The pith helmet is a textbook example of contested heritage. To a Briton who served in the Royal Marines, it is a piece of regimental tradition. To a Vietnamese citizen, it is national identity. To a Kenyan whose grandparents lived through the Mau Mau period, it can evoke the visual signature of British conquest. All three readings are honest. Each makes sense in its own context. The honest task is to hold all three in mind at once.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a timeline of the pith helmet. Salakot in the Philippines (pre-European), Spanish adoption (18th century), British in India (1840s), spread across European empires (1860s-1880s), wars (Anglo-Zulu, Boer, Gallipoli), Vietnamese adoption (1946), Vietnam War, Royal Marines ceremonial use today, controversies in modern travel. One object, many histories.
  • Geography: On a world map, mark the territories where pith helmets were worn. The British Empire (India, Africa, Caribbean, Pacific), the French Empire (Indochina, North and West Africa), the German colonial empire (Tanganyika, Namibia, Cameroon), the Italian empire (Libya, Ethiopia), the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia), the Belgian Congo, the Spanish colonies. The pith helmet is a map of European imperialism.
  • Science: Investigate why a pith helmet is cooler than a felt or metal helmet. Discuss thermal insulation, ventilation, brim shading, and reflection. The physics of the helmet explains why it spread so widely. Tropical workers across many cultures developed their own light hats for the same reasons.
  • Ethics: Discuss the controversy over pith helmets worn by modern Western politicians on visits to African countries. Some say it is just a sun hat. Others say it evokes a painful colonial history. How should we think about this? Strong answers will see that what an object means depends on the histories of the people seeing it, not just on the intentions of the person wearing it.
  • Art: Look at colonial-era photographs and paintings that show pith helmets — Stanley in Africa, the Anglo-Zulu War paintings, British Raj photographs, French Indochina images. Discuss: how is the helmet used visually? Often it marks who is in charge — placed on the head of the European, in the centre of the frame, with the indigenous people positioned around or below. The composition tells the story.
  • Language: Trace the names of the helmet across languages. English 'pith helmet', 'sola topi' (from Hindi 'topi' meaning hat plus 'sola' for the pith plant), 'sun helmet'. Spanish 'salacot'. French 'casque colonial'. German 'Tropenhelm'. Vietnamese 'mũ cối' (literally 'cake-press hat' from the shape). Each name tells you what the speakers thought the object was for.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The pith helmet was invented by the British.

Right

The pith helmet design has older origins. The deep ancestor is the salakot, a traditional Filipino sun hat used by indigenous peoples for centuries before European arrival. The Spanish in the Philippines adopted the salakot (calling it the salacot) for their colonial military in the 18th century. The British in India developed their own version from the 1840s onwards, using Indian sola pith. The British version became most famous, but it was not the original.

Why

Western histories often credit Europeans with inventions that built on much older indigenous traditions. The pith helmet is one example. Crediting only the British erases the Filipino origin.

Wrong

The pith helmet is just an old sun hat.

Right

The pith helmet carries real historical weight as a symbol of European imperialism. For a century it appeared on the heads of colonial governors, soldiers, and administrators across India, Africa, and South-East Asia. Many people whose ancestors lived under European colonial rule still associate the helmet with the people who took their land, killed their relatives, or imposed foreign rule. To treat it as 'just a sun hat' dismisses this real history. At the same time, the helmet also has a separate life as Vietnamese national headwear. Both contexts are real.

Why

Reducing contested objects to their physical form ignores the meanings they have accumulated. The pith helmet is a hat. It is also a symbol. Both are true.

Wrong

All pith helmets are the same.

Right

Many different pith helmet patterns exist, each with its own history. The British Foreign Service Helmet (pre-1900), the Wolseley Helmet (1900 onwards), the French casque colonial, the German Tropenhelm, the Dutch tropenhelm, the Italian casco coloniale, the American summer helmet, and the Vietnamese mũ cối are all different specific designs within the broader pith helmet family. Each has its own shape, materials, badges, and history.

Why

Generic talk of 'the pith helmet' can hide significant differences. The Royal Marines' modern white Wolseley is not the same object as a Vietnamese soldier's green mũ cối, even though both descend from the same general design tradition.

Wrong

The Vietnamese copied the pith helmet from the French because they had nothing better.

Right

The Vietnamese adopted the pith helmet design because it was a good design — light, well-ventilated, with a wide brim — and they had the industrial capacity to produce it locally. Adapting the coloniser's tool and using it against them was also a deliberate political gesture. The green cloth and the red star marked it as Vietnamese, not French. The Vietnamese chose this helmet as carefully as the British had chosen theirs.

Why

It is condescending to suggest that non-European armies copied European designs because they were 'behind'. The Vietnamese adoption was a sophisticated piece of military and symbolic thinking, made by people who had thought carefully about what they wanted to wear and why.

Teaching this with care

This is a contested-heritage lesson. The pith helmet is one of the most loaded objects in colonial history, and the lesson handles real pain on multiple sides. Be honest. Be careful. Be respectful. Pronounce 'salakot' as 'SAH-lah-kot' (Filipino) or 'sah-lah-COTE' (Spanish 'salacot'). Pronounce 'pith' as 'pith' (rhymes with 'with'). Pronounce 'sola topi' as 'SOH-la TOH-pee'. Pronounce 'mũ cối' as 'MOO COY' (approximately — the Vietnamese tones are not preserved in English). Pronounce 'Wolseley' as 'WOLZ-lee'. Pronounce 'Tropenhelm' as 'TROH-pen-helm' (German). Pronounce 'puggaree' as 'PUG-uh-ree'. Pronounce 'Aeschynomene' as 'ess-kee-NOM-uh-nee' (the Latin plant name; not essential). Be honest about European colonial violence. The pith helmet was worn during real conquests, massacres, dispossessions, and racial regimes. The Anglo-Zulu War, the Sudan campaigns, the Boer War, the suppression of the Mau Mau, the wars of conquest in West and Central Africa, the maintenance of the British Raj, the violence of French rule in Algeria and Indochina, the Belgian regime in the Congo, the Italian conquest of Ethiopia — these are not abstractions. People died. Whole peoples lost their political independence. The helmet was present at many of these events. Mention this without dwelling. Be honest about the Vietnamese reuse. The mũ cối is not 'the pith helmet despite the colonial past'. It is the pith helmet because of the colonial past — the Vietnamese took the French object and turned it into a Vietnamese one. The helmet on Vietnamese heads is a kind of victory. Make this clear without overstating it. Be careful with the modern controversy. Several British politicians have been criticised in recent years for wearing pith helmets on visits to African countries. The criticism is real and the criticised politicians' defences are also real. The lesson should present both views fairly without judging individuals by name. Be respectful of the Royal Marines and other modern Commonwealth users. These are real people serving in real institutions, wearing the helmet as part of their tradition. Their tradition is part of the lesson's story. They are not the villains. They are also not unproblematic. Hold both honestly. If you have Vietnamese, Indian, African, or Caribbean students in your class, they may have family connections to the colonial period or to the Vietnamese reuse. Welcome this knowledge without putting individual students on the spot. Be honest that some students may have ancestors on different sides of these histories. A descendant of a British colonial officer and a descendant of a colonised people may be in the same classroom. Both deserve to be taught honestly. Don't make either feel they must apologise or defend. The lesson is about the object, not about anyone's family. Use the term 'contested heritage' carefully. The lesson places the pith helmet in this category because it genuinely is contested — different communities read it very differently, and there is no single 'right' meaning. Other objects might fit the category too. The intention is not to declare the helmet 'bad'. It is to acknowledge that an honest account has to hold multiple meanings at once. End the lesson on the present. The Vietnamese army today wears the mũ cối. The Royal Marines today wear the Wolseley. Both will be on parade somewhere today. The same hat, in two different traditions, in two different parts of the world, still on living heads. The story is not closed.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the pith helmet.

  1. What is a pith helmet, and where does the design come from?

    A pith helmet is a lightweight, dome-shaped helmet with a wide brim, designed for shading the head from tropical sun. Its deep origin is the salakot — a traditional Filipino sun hat used by indigenous peoples of the Philippines before European arrival. The Spanish in the Philippines adopted the salakot in the 18th century; the British in India developed their own version from the 1840s using Indian sola pith.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the form (lightweight, brimmed) and the origin (Philippines / salakot / British India). Strong answers will mention both Filipino and British roles.
  2. Why did European colonial powers adopt the pith helmet?

    For practical reasons. The pith helmet was much lighter (about 300 grams), better ventilated, and better at shading the face than the wool tunics and heavy helmets European soldiers had previously worn in the tropics. It dramatically reduced heatstroke deaths, which had been a major problem for European troops in India and other tropical territories.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the physical advantages (light, ventilated, shading) and the medical reason (heatstroke). Either alone earns most marks.
  3. How did the pith helmet become a symbol of European imperialism?

    From the 1860s to the 1940s, the pith helmet was worn by European colonial soldiers, governors, and administrators across India, Africa, South-East Asia, and the Caribbean. It appeared in wars of conquest, in colonial photographs, in films, and in literature. Over many decades, the image of a white man in a pith helmet came to stand visually for European power in the tropics.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the broad use across colonial territories and the accumulation of symbolic meaning over time.
  4. How did the Vietnamese army come to wear the pith helmet?

    In 1946, the Viet Minh (the Vietnamese independence movement led by Ho Chi Minh) copied the French colonial pith helmet design, covered it in jungle green cloth, and added a small red enamel star with the Vietnamese state symbol. The mũ cối became and remains the standard military headwear of Vietnam, worn through the First Indochina War, the Vietnam War, and to the present day.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the act of adoption (Viet Minh / 1946 / from French) and the transformation (green cloth, red star, becoming Vietnamese).
  5. Why is the same object seen so differently in different places?

    Because symbols are made by use, not by design. The pith helmet has been used in many different contexts — by European colonisers, by Vietnamese independence fighters, by Royal Marines on ceremonial duty, by tourists. Each community reads the helmet against their own history. A Vietnamese soldier reads it as national identity; a Kenyan whose grandparents lived through British rule may read it as the visual signature of conquest. Both readings are honest.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that makes the point that meaning depends on context and the experiences of the viewer. Bonus credit for naming at least two different reading communities.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The same hat is worn by Royal Marines on parade and by Vietnamese soldiers on patrol. What do we learn from objects that mean opposite things to different people?

    This is a question about symbols. Strong answers will see that symbols do not have fixed meanings. The pith helmet is the same physical object whether it sits on a Royal Marine's head in Plymouth or a Vietnamese soldier's head in Hanoi. The object is identical. The meaning is opposite. This is because meaning is made by communities and histories, not by objects themselves. The Royal Marines see in the helmet a tradition of regimental service. The Vietnamese see in the helmet a victory over colonial conquest. Both readings are honest. Both are real. Strong answers will see that this is true of many symbols. The same cross on a chain may be a religious symbol to one wearer and an empty piece of jewellery to another. The same red flag may mean revolution to one person and danger to another. The same uniform may mean safety to one community and threat to another. End by saying that being honest about symbols means accepting that the same object can carry many meanings at once. We do not have to declare which is 'really' right. We have to understand how different people read what they see. The world is more honest when we hold multiple meanings together.
  2. Some critics say wearing a pith helmet in Africa today is offensive, even when the wearer does not mean any offence. Do intentions matter, or only effects?

    This is a real and difficult question. Strong answers will see that intentions and effects both matter, but they are not the same thing. Someone who wears a pith helmet on a Kenyan safari may not intend to evoke colonial supervision. But the helmet does evoke colonial supervision for the Kenyans who see it. The history is real. The visual association is real. The fact that the wearer 'didn't mean it' does not erase what the helmet looks like to Kenyans. Strong answers will see that this is a common problem with symbols. A swastika worn casually in a country with strong Holocaust memory will be read as Holocaust imagery, whether or not the wearer means it that way. A Confederate flag worn by someone who claims they 'just like the design' will be read in the United States against the history of slavery and Jim Crow. End by saying that a person who cares about how their actions affect others will think about what their clothing is communicating — not just what they intend, but what others will see. This does not mean every choice is sinister. It does mean that thoughtfulness about context is part of being a careful person. The pith helmet is not always wrong to wear. But wearing one in Kenya, as a British politician on a state visit, is doing something specific. The wearer is responsible for understanding what.
  3. The Vietnamese took the coloniser's hat and made it their own. Can you think of other examples where an oppressed group has taken a symbol of their oppression and turned it into a symbol of pride?

    This is a question about the transformation of symbols. Strong answers will see that this has happened many times. The word 'queer' was a homophobic slur in the 1970s; the LGBTQ community has reclaimed it as a self-description. The pink triangle, used by Nazis to mark gay prisoners in concentration camps, has been reclaimed as a symbol of gay pride. The word 'suffragette' was a sneering term for women campaigning for the vote; the women adopted it as their own. The Black Panther Party in the United States took the panther — used by white supremacists in some symbology — and made it a symbol of Black power. Strong answers will see that this kind of reclamation is one of the most powerful things an oppressed group can do. It takes the weapon that was used against them and turns it around. The oppressors lose control of their own symbol. The oppressed gain a new identity marker. End by saying that the Vietnamese mũ cối is one of the clearest examples in modern history. The French colonised Vietnam for over sixty years. The Vietnamese fought a brutal eight-year war to expel them. Then they took the symbol of French colonial power — the lightweight helmet that French soldiers had worn while patrolling Vietnamese villages — and made it their own military headwear. Today, Vietnamese soldiers stand proud in helmets that the French could once have looked at and assumed were their own. There is a deep moral satisfaction in this. The oppressed take the oppressor's tool and use it for the opposite purpose. The Vietnamese did this. So have many other peoples.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Show two photographs — one of a British colonial officer in a white pith helmet, one of a Vietnamese soldier in a green pith helmet. Ask: 'What do these two pictures have in common?' Take answers. Then say: 'The hats are essentially the same design. The same lightweight tropical helmet. But one is a symbol of colonial conquest; the other is a symbol of resistance to colonial conquest. Today we are going to find out how that happened.'
  2. THE COLONIAL HELMET (15 min)
    Tell the story. The salakot in the Philippines, Spanish adoption in the 18th century, British development in India in the 1840s. By the 1880s, every European colonial power was using a version of the helmet. The Wolseley helmet became standard British Army issue in 1900. The image of the white man in a pith helmet became a visual signature of European empire — at the Zulu War, in the Sudan, in the Raj, in the Belgian Congo, in French Indochina.
  3. THE COLONIAL VIOLENCE (10 min)
    Honestly mention the colonial violence done by people wearing these helmets. The Anglo-Zulu War, the Sudan campaigns, the suppression of the Mau Mau, the wars in Algeria and Indochina, the regimes in the Congo and German South-West Africa. The helmet did not cause this violence. But the helmet was on the heads of the people who did it. This is why the helmet carries the weight it does.
  4. THE VIETNAMESE REUSE (10 min)
    In 1946, the Viet Minh adopted the French colonial helmet design, covered it in green cloth, added a red star, and made it their own. The mũ cối was worn through the First Indochina War, the Vietnam War, and continues today. The Vietnamese took the coloniser's tool and used it against them. This is one of the great symbol-reclamations of modern history.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the pith helmet teach us about symbols?' Take a few answers. End by saying: 'The same object can mean opposite things to different people, because symbols are made by use and history, not just by design. The Royal Marines on parade today and the Vietnamese army today wear essentially the same hat. The histories the two communities carry are not the same. Honest understanding requires holding both meanings together. The pith helmet is a hat. It is also a window into how the world remembers.'
Classroom materials
Compare and Contrast
Instructions: Show students images of two pith helmets — a white British Wolseley helmet and a green Vietnamese mũ cối. Ask them to list what is similar and what is different. Same shape, same lightweight construction, same wide brim. Different cloth colour, different badge, different cultural meaning. Discuss: how does a small change (the cloth, the badge) make the object mean something completely different?
Example: In Ms Carter's class, students compared the two helmets in small groups. The teacher said: 'You have just identified one of the most interesting things about objects. The form is almost identical. The meaning is opposite. The Vietnamese took the form and gave it a new meaning by changing only the surface — the cloth and the badge. They did not need to reinvent the hat. They just needed to make it theirs.'
Mapping the Empires
Instructions: On a world map, mark the territories where each European colonial power wore the pith helmet. British, French, German, Italian, Dutch, Belgian, Portuguese, Spanish, American. Discuss: by 1914, what proportion of the world was administered by people in pith helmets? The answer is sobering. The helmet is a map of European imperialism at its peak.
Example: In Mr Singh's class, students traced the empires on a map. The teacher said: 'You have just mapped the world that one specific hat administered. The British helmet appeared in India, Egypt, Sudan, South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, the Caribbean, Burma, Malaya, Hong Kong, the Pacific. The French in Indochina, Algeria, Senegal, Mali, Chad. The Germans in Tanganyika and Namibia. The Belgians in the Congo. The Dutch in Indonesia. The Italians in Libya and Ethiopia. By 1914, most of the world outside Europe and the Americas was administered by men wearing pith helmets. The hat is small. Its reach was enormous.'
Symbols That Changed Meaning
Instructions: On the board, list other objects or words whose meanings have changed over time. The word 'queer'. The pink triangle. The Confederate flag (in different periods). The Black Panther. The hammer and sickle (in different countries). Discuss: under what conditions do symbols change meaning? Often when a community takes a symbol of its oppression and reclaims it. Sometimes when a community uses a symbol for new purposes. Sometimes when historical events change how a symbol is read.
Example: In Ms Nguyen's class, students brainstormed examples of changed symbols. The teacher said: 'You have just identified one of the most important things about meaning. Symbols are not stable. They change with the communities that use them. The pith helmet is one example. The Vietnamese reclamation took a French colonial tool and made it Vietnamese. The English word queer was once a slur; LGBTQ communities have made it a self-description. Many symbols change over time, often through deliberate acts of reclamation. Understanding this is part of understanding how cultures actually work.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Golden Stool of the Ashanti for another object connected with the colonial era, viewed from the West African side.
  • Try a lesson on the Nansen passport for a story of statelessness and identity documents in the colonial and post-colonial world.
  • Try a lesson on the saddle for another object whose movement between cultures changed history (Spanish to vaquero to American cowboy).
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on European imperialism in the 19th and 20th centuries. The pith helmet is one small visual thread in a much bigger story.
  • Connect this lesson to ethics class with a longer discussion of contested heritage. What do we owe to the painful histories carried by everyday objects? When is reclamation possible? When is it not?
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of how symbols carry meaning across communities. A flag, a uniform, a statue, a piece of music — each can read very differently to different communities, depending on what those communities have experienced.
Key takeaways
  • The pith helmet is a lightweight tropical helmet, originally derived from the Filipino salakot, adapted by the Spanish in the 18th century, and developed into the famous British colonial form in the 1840s using Indian sola pith.
  • Every major European colonial power — Britain, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Portugal, Spain, and the United States — adopted versions of the pith helmet between the 1840s and the 1940s. It became a visible symbol of European imperialism.
  • The helmet was practical (about 300 grams, well-ventilated, well-shaded), which is why it spread so widely. But its accumulated symbolic meaning came from the actions of the people who wore it — colonial soldiers, governors, and administrators across India, Africa, South-East Asia, and the Caribbean.
  • In 1946, the Vietnamese People's Army adopted the French colonial pith helmet design, covered it in green cloth, and added a red star. The mũ cối became a symbol of Vietnamese national identity and anti-colonial resistance, worn through the First Indochina War, the Vietnam War, and to the present day.
  • The same object — the pith helmet — now carries opposite meanings in different communities. To Vietnamese citizens, it is national identity. To former colonised peoples, it can evoke colonial conquest. To Royal Marines on ceremonial duty, it is regimental tradition. All three readings are honest.
  • The pith helmet teaches that symbols are made by use, not by design. The same object can mean very different things to different communities, depending on what those communities have experienced. Honest understanding holds these meanings together rather than choosing one as 'the right' one.
Sources
  • Pith helmet — Wikipedia (2026) [encyclopedia]
  • Salakot — Wikipedia (2026) [encyclopedia]
  • The Wolseley Helmet in Pictures: From Omdurman to El Alamein — Stuart Bates and Peter Suciu (2014) [book]
  • Pith Helmets of the British Empire — Peter Suciu (2008) [academic]
  • Vietnam: A History — Stanley Karnow (1983) [book]