The new site of all fashion.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Chinese clothing.
Chinese clothing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Clothing of China
Chinese
clothing
is the clothing, ancient and modern, worn by the
Chinese people
. It has varied by region and time, and is recorded by the artifacts and arts of
Chinese culture
.
Contents
[
hide
]
1
History
1.1
Dynastic China
1.1.1
Civil and military officials
1.2
Qing Dynasty (1644–1911)
1.3
Republican era
1.4
Early People's Republic
2
Image gallery
3
See also
4
References
5
External links
[
edit
]
History
[
edit
]
Dynastic China
Main article:
Han Chinese clothing
Traditional
Chinese clothing
is broadly referred to as
hanfu
with many variations such as traditional
Chinese academic dress
. Japanese clothes and Chinese clothes are very similar. Depending on one's status in society, each social class had a different sense of fashion. Most Chinese men wore Chinese black cotton shoes, but wealthy higher class people would wear tough black leather shoes for formal occasions. Very rich and wealthy men would wear very bright, beautiful silk shoes sometimes having leather on the inside. Women would wear bright, silk coated
Lotus shoes
under their
bound feet
. Male shoes were mostly less elaborate than women's.
[
edit
]
Civil and military officials
Chinese civil or military officials used a variety of codes to show their rank and position. The most recognized is the
Mandarin square
or rank badge. Another code was also the use of colorful hat knobs fixed on the top of their hats. The specific hat knob on one's hat determined one's rank. As there were twelve types of hat knobs representing the nine distinctive ranks of the civil or military position. Variations existed for
Ming official headwear
.
The Night Revels of Han Xizai
painting, originally by
Gu Hongzhong
, depicting life in the
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period
Robe of
Qianlong Emperor
with the
Chinese dragon
, hallmark of the
Emperor of China
and imperial families
[
edit
]
Qing Dynasty (1644–1911)
See also:
Cheongsam
and
changshan
The rise of the
Manchu
Qing Dynasty in many ways represented a cultural rupture with the past, as Manchu clothing styles were required to be worn by all noblemen and officials. This style eventually became popular among the commoners.
[
1
]
A new style of dress, called
tangzhuang
, included the
changshan
worn by men and the qipao worn by women.
Manchu official headwear
differed from the Ming version but the Qing continued to use the
Mandarin square
.
This jacket is made of silk. Chinese legend suggests silk production was discovered by Lady Hsi-Ling-Shih, the wife of the mythical Yellow Emperor.
[
edit
]
Republican era
Two women wearing
cheongsams
in a 1930s Shanghai advertisement.
The abolition of imperial China in 1912 had an immediate effect on dress and customs. The largely
Han Chinese
population immediately cut off their
queue
as they were forced to grow in submission to the overthrown Qing Dynasty.
Sun Yat-sen
popularised a new style of men's wear, featuring jacket and trousers instead of the robes worn previously. Adapted from Japanese student wear, this style of dress became known as the
Zhongshan suit
(Zhongshan being one of Sun Yat-sen's given names in Chinese).
For women, a transformation of the traditional
qipao
(cheongsam) resulted in a slender and form fitting dress with a high cut, resulting in the contemporary image of a
cheongsam
but contrasting sharply with the traditional
qipao
.
[
edit
]
Early People's Republic
Early in the People's Republic,
Mao Zedong
would inspire Chinese fashion with his own variant of the Zhongshan suit, which would be known to the west as
Mao suit
. Meanwhile, Sun Yat-sen's widow,
Soong Ching-ling
, popularised the
cheongsam
as the standard female dress. At the same time, old practices such as
footbinding
, which had been viewed as backwards and unmodern by both the Chinese as well as Westerners, were forbidden.
Around the
Destruction of the "Four Olds"
period in 1964, almost anything seen as part of
Traditional Chinese culture
would lead to problems with the
Communist
Red Guards
. Items that attracted dangerous attention if caught in the public included
jeans
,
high heels
, Western-style coats,
ties
,
jewelry
, cheongsams, and
long hair
.
[
2
]
These items were regarded as symbols of
bourgeois
lifestyle, which represented wealth. Citizens had to avoid them or suffer serious consequences such as torture or beatings by the guards.
[
2
]
A number of these items were thrown into the streets to embarrass the citizens.
[
3
]
[
edit
]
Image gallery
Jade burial suit
fashion
Emperor Wu of Jìn
, by
Yan Liben
(600–673)
Tang Dynasty
court ladies from the tomb of Princess Yongtai in the
Qianling Mausoleum
, near
Xi'an
in
Shaanxi
Official
Song Dynasty
portrait painting of Empress Cao, wife of
Emperor Renzong of Song
Ming Dynasty
Empress Xiao'an
Phoenix crown
of the Ming Dynasty empress
A Ming Dynasty portrait of the Chinese official Jiang Shunfu (1453–1504). The decoration of two cranes on his chest are a
Mandarin square
"rank badge" that indicate he was a civil official of the first rank.
Detail of Jiang Shunfu's rank badge
The
Qing DynastyQianlong Emperor
in ceremonial armour on horseback
Officers of the
Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association
in the United States in
tangzhuang
dress, with riding jackets (馬掛) over
changshan
.
Old
Chinese
garb from the early to mid-20th century
[
edit
]
See also
Culture of China
National costume
China
Chinese language
Chinese history
[
edit
]
References
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment