Homage (pronounced hom-ij, om-ij or oh-mahzh)
(1) Respect or reverence paid or rendered.
(2) In feudal era custom & law, the formal public
acknowledgment by which a feudal tenant or vassal declared himself to be the
man or vassal of his lord, owing him fealty and service; something done in
acknowledgment of vassalage (archaic).
(3) The relation thus established of a vassal to his lord
(archaic).
(4) Something done or given in acknowledgment or
consideration of the worth of another.
(5) To render homage to (archaic except in artistic or
historic use).
(6) An artistic work imitating another in a flattering
style.
(7) A (sometimes controversial) way of describing an
imitation, clone or replica of something.
(8) A demonstration of respect, such as towards an
individual after their retirement or death (often in the form of (an obviously retrospective)
exhibition).
1250–1300: From the Middle English hommage, omage & umage
(the existence of “homage” is contested), from the Old French homage & hommage, from the Medieval Latin homināticum (homage, the service of a vassal or 'man'), the
construct being (h)ome (man), from the from Latin hominem, accusative of homō (a man (and in Medieval Latin “a
vassal”)) + -āticum (the noun-forming
suffix) (-age). The
suffix -age was from the Middle English -age,
from the Old French -age, from the
Latin -āticum. Cognates include the French -age, the Italian -aggio, the Portuguese -agem,
the Spanish -aje & Romanian -aj.
It was used to form nouns (1) with the sense of collection or
appurtenance, (2) indicating a process, action, or a result, (3) of a state or
relationship, (4) indicating a place, (5) indicating a charge, toll, or fee,
(6) indicating a rate & (7) of a unit of measure. The verb homage was derived
from the noun in the late sixteenth century (the agent noun homager noted from the turn of the
fifteenth). Homage is a noun & verb,
homager is a noun, homageable is an adjective and homaging, & homaged are
verbs; the noun plural is homages. In Scots
the spelling was homage and in Irish, ómós and
the old synonym manred has been
obsolete since the fourteenth century. The
predominately US pronunciation with a silent
h happened because of a conflation with the nearly synonymous doublet hommage, pronounced thus.
By convention, the modern use of the form is usually as “pay
homage to” but because of the variations in pronunciations (the h silent and
not), homage is sometimes preceded by the article “a” and sometimes by “an” and
under various influences in popular culture, the French pronunciation has in
some circles become fashionable. The
term “lip homage” is much the same as “lip service”: something expressed with “mere
words”. In Middle English, the meanings
variously were (1) An oath of loyalty to a liege performed by their vassal; a
pledge of allegiance, (2) Money given to a liege by a vassal or the privilege
of collecting such money, (3) A demonstration of respect or honor towards an
individual (including prayer), (4) The totality of a feudal lord's subjects
when collected and (5) Membership in an organized religion or belief system.
In feudal times, a homage was said to be an “act of
fealty”. The Middle English noun fealty dates from the twelfth century
and was from feaute, from the Old
French feauté, from fealte (loyalty, fidelity; homage sworn
by a vassal to his overlord; faithfulness), from the Latin fidelitatem (nominative fidelitas)
(faithfulness, fidelity), from fidelis
(loyal, faithful), from the primitive Indo-European root bheidh- (to trust, confide, persuade). In feudal law, to attorn was to “transfer homage or allegiance to another lord”. The verb attorn
(to turn over to another) was from the Middle English attournen, from the Old French atorner
(to turn, turn to, assign, attribute, dispose; designate), the construct being a- (to) + tourner (to turn), from the Latin tornare (to turn on a lathe) from tornus (lathe), from the Greek tornos
(lathe, tool for drawing circles), from the primitive Indo-European root tere- (to rub, turn). Attornment was a part English real property
law but was not directly comparable with the operation of those laws which in matters
of slavery assigned property rights over human beings which technically were no
different than those over a horse. Attornment
recognized there was in the feudal system some degree of reciprocity in rights & obligations and it was held to be unreasonable a tenant
should become subject to a new lord without their own approval. At law, what evolved was the doctrine of
attornment which held alienation could not be imposed without the consent of
the tenant. Given the nature of feudal
relations it was an imperfect protection but a considerable advance and attornment
was also extended to all cases of lessees for life or for years. The arrangement regarding the historic feudal
relationships lasted until the early eighteenth century but attornment persists
in modern property law as a mechanism which acts to preserve the essential
elements of commercial tenancies in the event of the leased property changing
hands. It provides for what would now be
called “transparency” in transactions and ensures all relevant information is
disclosed, thereby ensuring the integrity of the due diligence process.
The historical concepts of homage and tribute are sometimes confused. Homage was a formal ritual performed by a vassal to pledge loyalty and submission to a lord or monarch. There were variations but the classic model was one in which the vassal would kneel before the lord, place his hands between the lord's hands, and swear an oath of loyalty and service. That was not merely symbolic for it signified the vassal's acknowledgment of the lord's authority and their willingness to serve and protect the lord in exchange for a right to live on (and from) the land. The relationship was that creature of feudalism; something both personal and contractual. Tributes were actual payments made by one ruler or state to another as a sign of submission, acknowledgment of superiority, or in exchange for protection or peace. Tribute could be paid in gold, other mediums of exchange or in the form of goods or services. Tribute was something imposed on a subordinate entity by a dominant power, either as a consequence of defeat in war or as a way of avoiding being attacked (ie a kind of protection racket). The meaning of homage in feudal property law was quite specific but synonyms (depending on context) now include deference, tribute, allegiance, reverence, loyalty, obeisance, duty, adoration, fealty, faithfulness, service, fidelity, worship, adulation, honor, esteem, praise, genuflection, respect, awe, fidelity, loyalty & devotion. However, those using homage for anything essentially imitative might find out other synonyms include fake (and more generously faux, tribute, reproduction, pastiche, clone or replica).
Sample from Ariana Grande’s (b 1993) Thank U, Next (2018).
Singer Ariana Grande’s (b 1993) song Thank U, Next
(2018) was one of the year’s big successes and the video included
well-constructed references to a number of early-century pop culture products
including Legally Blonde (2001) and Mean Girls (2004). Within popular culture, there seems to be a
greater tolerance of works which are in some way a homage, the term “sampling” presumably
chosen to imply what was being done was (1) taking only a small fragment of
someone else’s work and (2) for all purposes within long established doctrine
of “fair use”. Interestingly, instead of
regarding sampling as fair use, US courts initially were quite severe and in
many early cases treated the matter as one of infringement of copyright,
apparently because while a attributed paragraph here and there in a paper of
dozens or hundreds of pages could reasonably seen as “fair use”, a recurring
snatch of even a few seconds in a song only three minutes long was not. Of late, US appeal courts seem to have been
more accommodating of sampling and have taken the view the legal doctrine of de minimis which has been used when
assessing literary or academic works should apply also to sampling but the
mechanics of calculating “fair use” need to be considered in the context of the
product. The Latin phrase de minimis (pertaining to minimal things)
was from the expressions de minimis non
curat praetor (the praetor does not concern himself with trifles) or de minimis non curat lex (the law does
not concern itself with trifles) and was an exclusionary principle by which a
court could refuse to hear or dismiss matters to trivial to bother the justice
system. One Queen of Sweden preferred
the more poetic Latin adage, aquila non
capit muscās (the eagle does not catch flies). As a legal doctrine, it actually predates its
fifteenth century formalization in the textbooks and there are records in civil,
Islamic and ecclesiastical courts of Judges throwing out cases because the
matters involved were of such little matter.
In many jurisdictions, governments now set a certain financial limit for
the matters to be considered, below which they are either excluded or referred
to a tribunal established for such purposes.
One suspects artists, architects, film directors and such
are inclined to call their work a homage (or probably the French hommage (pronounced omm-arge)) as a kind
of pre-emptive strike against accusations of plagiarism or a lack of
originality. Car manufacturers are apt
to do it too, examples in recent decades including the BMW Mini, Volkswagen
Beetle, Dodge Challenger and Chevrolet Camaro, all of which shamelessly
followed the lines of the original versions from generations earlier. The public response to these retro-efforts
was usually positive although if clumsily executed (Jaguar S-Type) derision
soon follows. Sometimes, it’s just a
piece which is homaged. On the Mercedes-Benz
CL (C215 1998-2006), the homage was to the roofline of the W111 & W112
coupés (1961-1971), especially the memorable sweep of the rear glass although
all of that was itself a homage to the 1955 Chryslers. It was a shame the C215 didn’t pick up more
of the W111’s motifs, the retrospective bits easily the best.
1969 Chevrolet Camaro Z/28 (left) and 2023 Chevrolet Camaro. The original Chevrolet Camaro (1966-1969) was a response to the original Ford Mustang (1964) which had made the pony-car segment a wildly popular and profitable place to be and it in turn not the shape the Mustang would follow but certainly the engineering but the styling attracted Chrysler which adopted the lines just as Chevrolet abandoned them. Chevrolet however picked them up again in 2010 but their homage to 1966 was perhaps a little too heavy-handed, dramatic though the effect was. Still, the result doubtlessly was better that what would have been delivered had the designers come up with anything original and that's not a problem restricted cars. One wishes architects would more often pay homage to mid-century modernism or art deco but the issue seems to be all the awards architects give each other are only for originality, thus the assembly line of the ugly but distinctive.
1970 Dodge Challenger (left) and 2023 Dodge Challenger (right). The original Challenger (and its corporate companions the Plymouth Barracuda & Cuda) was a homage to the 1966 Camaro and so well executed that Chrysler’s pair are thought by many to be the best looking pony cars of the muscle car era. In 2008 when the look was reprised, it was thought a most a accomplished effort and better received than would be the new Camaro two season later. Chevrolet must have been miffed Dodge was so praised for paying homage to what in 1969 had been borrowed from their 1966 range.
1979 Volkswagen Beetle Cabriolet by Karmann (left) and 2015 Volkswagen Beetle Cabriolet (right). First produced in 1938, Volkswagen clung to the rear-engine / air-cooled formula so long it almost threatened the company’s survival and while the public showed little enthusiasm for a return to the mechanical configuration (the Porsche crew are a separate species which, if they had their way, would still not have to bother with cooling fluid), the shape of the Beetle did appeal and over two generations between 1997-2019, the company sold what was initially called the “New Beetle”. Despite the pre-war lines imposing significant packaging inefficiencies, it was popular enough to endure for over a decade.
1966 Austin Mini-Cooper 1275 S (left) and 2001 BMW Mini (right). Students of the history of design insist the BMW Mini was not so much a homage to the British Motor Corporation’s (BMC) original Mini (1959) but actually to some of the conceptual sketches which emerged from the design office between 1957-1958 but were judged too radical for production. That was true but there are enough hints and clues in the production models for nobody to miss the point.
1965 Jaguar 3.8 S-Type (left) and 1999 Jaguar S-Type. Released in 1963, the Jaguar S-Type was an updated Mark 2 with the advantage of more luggage space and markedly improved ride and handling made possible by the grafting on of the independent rear-suspension from the E-Type (XKE) and Mark X (later 420G). The improvements were appreciated but the market never warmed to the discontinuity between the revised frontal styling and the elongated rear end, the latter working better when a Mark X look was adopted in front and released as the 420. Still, although never matching the appeal of the classic Mark 2 with its competition heritage, it has a period charm and has a following in the Jaguar collector market. According to contemporary accounts, the homage launched in 1999 was a good car but it seemed a curious decision to use as a model a vehicle which has always been criticized for its appearance although compared with the ungainly retro, the original S-Type (1963-1968) started to look quite good, the new one the answer to a question something like "What would a Jaguar look like if built by Hyundai?". As an assignment in design school that would have been a good question and the students could have pinned their answers to the wall as a warning to themselves but it wasn't one the factory should ever have posed. Quietly, the new S-Type was dropped in 2007 after several seasons of indifferent sales.
1956 Chrysler 300B (left), 1970 Mercedes-Benz 280 SE Coupé (centre) and 2005 Mercedes-Benz SL65 (right).
The 1955-1956 Chryslers live in the shadow cast by the big fins which sprouted on the 1957 cars but they possess a restraint and elegance of line which was lost as a collective madness overtook the industry. Mercedes-Benz in 1961 paid due homage when the 220 SE Coupé (W111; 1961-1971) was released and returned to the roofline with the C215 (1998-2006). The big coupé was the closest the factory came to styling success in recent years (although the frontal treatment was unfortunate) but one must be sympathetic to the designers because so much is now dictated by aerodynamics. Still, until they too went mad, the BMW design office seemed to handle big coupés better.
In the collector market, there are many low-volume models
which have become highly prized. Some
were produced only in low numbers because of a lack of demand, some because the
manufacturer needed to make only so many for homologation purposes and some
because production was deliberately limited.
Such machines can sell for high prices, sometimes millions so, especially
where such vehicles are based on more mundane models produced in greater
numbers, many are tempted to “make their own”, a task which car range from the
remarkably simple to the actually impossible.
Those creating such things often produce something admirable (and
technically often superior to the original) and despite what some say, there’s
really no objection to the pursuit provided there is disclosure because
otherwise it’s a form of fraud. When
such machines are created, those doing the creating seldom say fake or faux and
variously prefer tribute, clone, recreation, homage or replica and those words in
this context come with their own nuanced meanings, replica for example not meaning exactly
what it does in geometry or database administration.
A 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO in silver (US$70 million) and a fine replica by Tempero of a 1963 model in rosso corsa (US$1.2 million).
As an extreme example of the homage was inspired by the Ferrari 250 GTO, of which it’s usually accepted 36 were built although there were actually 41 (2 x (1961) prototypes; 32 x (1962–63) Series I 250 GTO; 3 x (1962–1963) “330 GTO”; 1 x (1963) 250 GTO with LM Berlinetta-style body & 3 x (1964) Series II 250 GTO). The 36 in the hands of collectors command extraordinary prices, chassis 4153GT in June 2018 realizing US$70 million in a private sale whereas an immaculately crafted replica of a 1962 version by Tempero (New Zealand), said to be better built than any original GTO (although that is damning with faint praise, those who restore pre-modern Ferraris wryly noting that while the drive-trains were built with exquisite care, the assembly of the coachwork could be shoddy indeed) was listed for sale at US$1.3 million. Even less exalted machinery (though actually more rare still) like the 1971 Plymouth Hemi Cuda convertible also illustrate the difference for there are now considerably more clones / replicas / recreations etc than ever there were originals and the price difference is typically a factor of ten or more. On 13 November 2023, the market will be tested when a Ferrari 250 GTO (chassis 3765LM) will be auctioned in New York, RM Sotheby’s, suggesting a price exceeding $US60 million. A number which greatly exceeds or fails by much to make that mark will be treated a comment on the state of the world economy.
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