Deník Marie Bashkirtseff

Phaéton

Také známý jako: Phaéton, Phaeton

Culture culture/transport Moderate Aktualizováno: 2026-02-10

## Overview

A phaéton (from the mythological Phaethon, who drove the sun chariot) is a light, open, four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage. In 19th-century usage, phaétons were sporty, owner-driven vehicles — unlike most carriages, the phaéton could be driven by the owner rather than a coachman, making it associated with personal dash and skill.

## Description

Key features: - Light, open body with high seat - Four wheels, front pair typically smaller - Could be driven by the owner (no coachman required) - Seating for one or two passengers - Various subtypes: high phaéton, spider phaéton, mail phaéton - Associated with speed and sportiness

## Social Significance

The phaéton occupied an ambiguous social position. While it could be fashionable — a young gentleman driving his own phaéton cut a dashing figure — it was less formal than a landau or calèche with servants. Marie uses the phaéton to make a social judgment: when she sees Fedus in a phaéton rather than a fiacre, she notes that his own vehicle is actually more miserable than a hired cab would have been.

## Marie's Usage

- 1874-06-04 (carnet 020): "Fedus, en phaéton, pas en fiacre; le fiacre vaudrait mieux car c'est sa voiture, elle est bien misérable" — devastating social observation

## Related Terms

- *Tilbury — similar light owner-driven carriage - Fiacre — hired cab - Calèche* — more formal open carriage