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Armenian dress

The Armenian Taraz (Armenian: տարազ, taraz;[a]), also known as Armenian traditional clothing, reflects a rich cultural tradition. Wool and fur were utilized by the Armenians along with the cotton that was grown in the fertile valleys. During the Urartian period, silk imported from China was used by royalty. Later, the Armenians cultivated silkworms and produced their own silk.[1][2]

Armenian girls from Erzurum in traditional dress. Drawing by Alexandre Lacauchie, 1847
Armenian couple from the Ararat Plain, 19th century

The collection of Armenian women's costumes begins during the Urartu time period, wherein dresses were designed with creamy white silk, embroidered with gold thread. The costume was a replica of a medallion unearthed by archaeologists at Toprak Kale near Lake Van, which some 3,000 years ago was the site of the capital of the Kingdom of Urartu.[3]

Overview

The Armenian national costume, having existed through long periods of historical development, was one of the signals of self-preservation for the Armenian culture. Being in an area at the crossroads of diverse eastern styles, Armenian dress is significant in not only borrowing but also often playing an influential role on neighboring nations.[4]

The costume can be divided into two main regions: Western Armenians and Eastern Armenians. Which in turn are divided into separate subregions.

 
Left to Right: Western Armenian man, New Julfa woman, Yerevan woman, Agulis woman, Javakhk woman, Eastern Armenian man

The costume of the Armenians of Western Armenia is mainly divided into two regions:

1. Areas of the Eastern Provinces: Taron (including Sasun), Bardzr Hayk, Vaspurakan, and Baghesh.

2. The regions of Sebastia, Kayseri, Cilicia in the western states, and Kharberd-Tigranakert in the south.

The first group kept closer to the traditions of the Armenian costume while in the second group, the influence of some Anatolian cultures are seen.

Eastern Armenian costume can be divided into three regions:

1. Syunik-Artsakh, Zangezur, and Ayrarat.

2. Goghtan (Agulis, Ordubad)

3. Gandzak, Gugark, Shirak, Javakhk.

Colors

The Armenian costume is dominated by the colors of the four elements: earth, water, air, and fire. According to the 14th-century Armenian philosopher Grigor Tatatsi, the Armenian costume is made to express the ancestral soil, the whiteness of the water, the red of the air, and the yellow of the fire. Apricot symbolizes prudence and common sense, red symbolizes courage and martyrdom, blue symbolizes heavenly justice, white symbolizes purity. Some of the techniques used in making these costumes have survived to this day and are actively used in the applied arts, however, there are techniques that have been lost. Each province of Armenia stands out with its costume. The famous centers of Armenian embroidery – Van-Vaspurakan, Karin, Shirak, Syunik-Artsakh, Cilicia – stand out with their rhythmic and stylistic description of ornaments, color combinations and composition.[1]

Timeline

Ancient period: 900–600 BCE

The Urartians who were the predecessors to the Armenians wore a dress similar to that of Assyrians which consisted of short-sleeved tunics worn bare or with a shawl surrounding it. The Urartians decorated themselves with metal ornaments such as necklaces, bracelets, earrings, and pins. These metal ornaments were engraved with lion heads while necklaces of stone beads and long metal pins were draped across the body. Metal belts were an important part of the Urartian costume as well. The making of metal belts was considered an art form with magical scenes and animals being engraved into the belt in order to protect the wearer.[5]

Classical period: 600 BCE – 600 CE

The traditional dress of Armenians underwent a significant shift following the emergence of the Kingdom of Armenia as a distinct political entity. Armenian men wore fitted trousers and a distinct hat known as the Phrygian cap. This later evolved into the balshik which is a flexible accessory that is worn by shepherds and religious leaders alike.[5]

Medieval period: 600–1600 CE

Based on the works of Armenian manuscripts as well as images found on churches, coins, and khachkars, we can see that the Armenian elite wore clothing similar to that of Byzantine and Arab royalty, such as Turbans. Armenians held onto their unique traditions while also adopting from neighboring societies such as head coverings becoming commonplace for Armenian women.[5]

19th century

In her 1836 novel titled The City of The Sultan; and Domestic Manners of the Turks, Julia Pardoe described the Armenian merchants she observed immediately upon disembarking in the port of Stamboul:[6]

As I looked on the fine countenances, the noble figures, and the animated expression of the party, how did I deprecate their shaven heads, and the use of the frightful calpac, which I cannot more appropriately describe than by comparing it to the iron pots used in English kitchens, inverted! The graceful pelisse, however, almost makes amends for the monstrous head-gear, as its costly garniture of sable or marten-skin falls back, and reveals the robe of rich silk, and the cachemire shawl folded about the waist.

Pardoe also mentions they wore bejeweled rings and carried in their hands "pipes of almost countless cost.”

Nowadays

 
Armenian dancers in downtown Manhattan

Armenian traditional clothing started to fall out of use in the 1920s and was almost completely replaced by modern clothing by the 1960s. Today, Armenian traditional clothing is mostly used for dance performances where girls put on an arkhalig and long dress to simulate taraz while boys wear dark colored loose pants and a fitted jacket. In some areas of Armenia and Karabakh, elderly women still wear a short headscarf. Photo studios in Armenia allow for new generations to take pictures in traditional clothing and some women in recent times have begun to wear taraz again.[5]

An annual festival celebrating Armenian traditional dress known as Taraz Fest is hosted every year in Yerevan and Stepanakert by the Teryan cultural center and consists of showcases of the cultural dress.[7]

Men's clothing

Eastern Armenia

 
Armenian man from Gyumri wearing chukha and papakh

The basis of the Armenian men's body clothing was the lower shirt and pants. They were sewn from homemade canvas at home. The most common was the traditional tunic-shaped men's shirt – Shapik (Armenian: շապիկ) made of two cloths.[5] In an Armenian family, men's clothes, especially the head of the house, were paid special attention, as men judged the family as a whole by their appearance.[2]

The overall fashion of the Eastern Armenian costume was Caucasian, close to similar clothing worn by neighboring peoples in the Caucasus such as Azerbaijanis, Georgians, Dagestanis, and Chechens, among others.

Belt clothes

Men's body pants – Vartik (Armenian: վարտիկ; also votashor, tuban or pohan) differed from women's in that they did not have an applied decorative border at the bottom of the ankle; their pants were tucked into knitted socks and windings. A cap and vartic of traditional cut were worn in Armenia by men of all ages, from young boys to the elderly.[8]

Ballovars – shalvar (Armenian: շալվար) were worn over the body pants. They were sewn from homemade rough-shaft fabric painted black, less often dark blue or brown in the same fabric as the vartic.[1][5]

Outerwear

 
Armenian warrior from Nagorno-Karabakh wearing a Chukha and Papakha, 1837

The basis of outer shoulder clothing in Eastern Armenia was Arkhalugh and Chukha. Arkhalugh-type clothing has a centuries-old tradition among Armenians, as evidenced by images on tombstones and medieval miniatures. It was widespread and worn by the entire male population, starting from boys aged 10–12. Arkhalugh was sewn from purchased fabrics (satin, eraser, chintz, shawl), black, blue, brown tones, lined. Its decoration was a galun ribbon in the tone of the main material, which was covered with a collar, chest incision, hem and sleeves. In wealthy families, such as in the merchant class of Yerevan, along with the ribbon, a silk cord was added.[1]

Arkhalugh (Armenian: արխալուղ) – a long, tight, waist-jacket made of fabrics including silk, satin, cloth, cashmere and velvet, depending on the social status of its owner. It was usually girded with a silver belt, less often with a belt or a leather belt with false silver buttons.[2]

With a number of similarities to the Arkhalugh, the Chukha (Armenian: չուխա) had a wider functional purpose. The Chukha is a male humeral outerwear with layers and gathers that was detachable at the waist. It was made of cloth, tirma, and homespun textiles. Outerwear served not only as warm clothes, but as clothing for special occasions.[8] Most chukhas were decorated with a bandolier for gazyr cartridges on both sides of the coat, although Armenians would seldom wear the chukha with the cartridges inserted. The right to wear a chukha symbolized a certain socio-age status, as a rule, it was worn from the age of majority (from 15 to 20 years). The Chukhas were dressed in a mushtak or burka, and later as an urban influence. Sheepskin fur coat or mushtak as clothes were worn by the wealthy, mainly of the older generation.[2]

Some Eastern Armenian men additionally chose to wear a dagger, known as a Khanchal (Armenian: Խանչալ) or Dashuyn (Armenian: Դաշույն) over either the Chukha or the Arkhalugh. It was suspended from either a leather or silver belt and hung diagonally across the man's waist.[9] Such daggers were widespread throughout the Caucasus region, including Armenia. However, due to the lack of the strong warrior culture that was present in the areas north of Armenia, the dagger was a far less ubiquitous part of a man's outfit in Armenia than it was elsewhere in the region.

Burka (Armenian: այծենակաճ, aitsenakach) was the only cape in traditional Armenian costume. Armenians wore two types of burqa: fur and felt. Fur burka was made of goat wool, with fur outside, using long-pile fur. Felt burka and in some areas fur (Lori) was worn by shepherds.[5] This was often complete with a Bashlyk, a type of hood which was suspended from the back of the Burka and worn over the Papakh to protect against rain.

The men's clothing complex also included a leather belt, which was worn over the arkhalugh. The leather belt had a silver buckle and false ornaments engraved with plant ornaments.[5]

Men's wedding clothes, which were both festive and culturally significant, were distinguished by the fact that the arkhalugh was made of more expensive fabric, the chukha and shoelaces were red (this color was considered to be a guardian), and the belt was silver, which they received during the wedding from the bride's parents. This type of clothing of Karabakh men was also common among other Eastern Armenians, in particular in Syunik, Gogthan, as well as in Lori.[10]

Headgear

The standard headgear of Eastern Armenians was a fur hat – Papakh (Armenian: փափախ), sewn from sheep's skins.[11] Papakhs came in a variety of different shapes and sizes, with men of different regions and villages having different preferences. Generally speaking, men from Southern Armenia and Karabakh preferred a taller and more cylindrical style of papakh, while men from Northern Armenia usually wore one that was low and wide. The most expensive and prestigious was considered to be made from Bukhara sheep wool, which was worn by representatives of the wealthy classes, especially in cities. In these cities, very high, close to cylindrical, hats were worn complete with a chuhka with folding sleeves. The headgear and hat, in particular, were the embodiment of the honor and dignity of an Armenian man. Throwing his papakha on the ground was equated to his shame and dishonor. According to traditional etiquette, in certain situations, the man was supposed to take off his hat at the entrance to church, during funerals, when meeting highly revered and respected people, etc.[1]

Western Armenia

 
A western Armenian man in the early 19th century, by Louis Dupré

Traditional Armenian clothing from Western Armenia was generally standard throughout despite regional differences and had a similar silhouette, bright color scheme that was distinguished by colorfulness, and an abundance of embroidery.[1]

Men's bodywear had a similar cut to the East Armenian wear. However, the body shirt was distinguished by a side section of the gate. The body pants – vartik, were covered without a step wedge, but with a wide insert strip of fabric, as a result of which the width of such pants was often almost equal to their length. They were made of woolen multicolored threads.[1]

The traditional clothing of some Western Armenian provinces, namely those around lake Van, was a regional form of dress rather than an ethnic one, as many neighboring peoples such as Kurds also dressed in a similar fashion. However, as Armenians had a virtual monopoly on weaving and dress-making in the region, coupled with the fact that Armenians were the oldest living inhabitants of the area, it is likely that it was adopted from Armenians by the neighboring peoples.[12]

Outerwear

The gate and long sleeves of the upper shirt, Ishlik, were sewn with geometric patterns of red threads. In a number of regions such as in (Vaspurakan and Turuberan), the sleeve of the shirt ended with a long hanging piece – jalahiki. The shirt was worn with a kind of vest, a spruce (tree) with open breasts, from under which the shirt's embroidered breasts were clearly visible. Such a vest was a characteristic component of the traditional men's suit only in Western Armenia.[13]

From above, a short, waist-to-waisted woolen jacket was worn on the top – a batchkon, a one-piece-sleeved salt, often quilted. The wealthy Armenians chose the thinnest, especially Shatakh cloth, mostly of domestic and local handicrafts, and tried to sew all parts of the suit from one fabric”.[11]

On top of the top were worn short (up to the waist) swing clothes with short sleeves – Kazakhik made of goat fur or felt aba. The goat's jacket, covered with braids at the edges and with bundles of fur on its shoulders, was worn mainly by wealthy villagers.[14]

 
Ensemble from Sasun wearing Western Armenian Taraz

The outer warm clothes also included a long straight "Juppa". In wealthier families, the juppa was quilted and lined. It was preferred to be worn by mature men. In winter, in some, mainly mountainous regions (Sasun), wide fur coats made of sheepskin were worn, without a belt.

The belt as an indispensable part of men's suit in most regions Western Armenia was distinguished by its originality. The colored patterned belt was "rather a bandage around the waist. A long, wide shawl, knitted or woven, folded in width in several layers, was wrapped twice or more around the waist. The deep folds of the belt served as a kind of pocket for a handkerchief, kisset, wallet. For such a belt, you could plug both a long tube and a knife with a handle, and if necessary a dagger".[11]

The silver belt was an accessory of the city costume, it was worn in Karin, Kars, Van and other centers of highly developed craftsmanship production. Citizens, artisans, and wealthy peasants alike had belts made of massive silver plaques.[1]

Headgear

 
Arakhchi, XXI c.

The headgear in Western Armenia consisted of hats of various shapes (spherical, conical), felt, wool knitted and woven, which were usually worn in addition to the handkerchief. They had regional differences in the materials used to manufacture it as well as the style and color scheme of the ornament. A felt white cone-shaped hat was widespread – koloz with a pointed or rounded top.[15]

The widespread arakhchi, also known as arakhchin (Armenian: արախչի), was a truncated skull cap, knitted from wool or embroidered in single youth with multicolored woolen thread, with a predominance of red.[16] The way this traditional headdress was worn was a marker of its owner's marital condition, just as in Eastern Armenia, the right to wear an arakhicki belonged to a married man.[15]

Hamshen

The Hamshen province of Armenia had its own unique costume, sharing many similarities with the Caucasian costume found in Eastern Armenia. It was generally close to similar clothing worn by the neighboring Laz, Adjarian and Pontic Greek peoples. By the end of the 19th century, this costume included an undershirt, a top cover shirt, an Arkhalukh, and a short Chukha which reached a little below the waist. Hamshen Armenians traditionally wore very wide and long pants, however by the end of the 19th century this was replaced by a thinner pair of trousers called zipkas, worn with a pair of high boots. A wool or silk belt, 4–5 meters long, was tied over the trousers.

 
Hamshen Armenian men

In winter, many villagers wore a Kepenek, a felt outercoat similar to the Burka, except with a hood to cover the head. As everyday headwear, men wore a Bashlyk made of silk or wool which was tied around the head to form a headband. Men who owned arms completed their outfit with a series of firearms accessories, a knife, and a Khanchal dagger.[17]

Women's clothing

 
Armenian woman from Shamakhi, photo by F. Orden 1897

Eastern Armenia

At the beginning of the 20th century, women's clothing, unlike men's clothing, still preserved its traditional complexes in historical and ethnographic regions. Women's clothing of eastern and western Armenians was more homogeneous than men's clothing. The main difference was the abundance of embroidery and jewelry in a women's suit from Western Armenia as opposed to Eastern Armenia.

Clothes

In Armenia, women wore a long red shirt – halav made of cotton fabric with oblique wedges on the sides, long straight sleeves with a gusset and a straight incision of the gate. This shirt was worn mainly by girls and young women. Long body pants were sewn from the same red fabric as the shirt, on a white lining and waist held on hold with the help of honjang.[15]

Holiday pants were sewn in silk red fabric on a white fabric lining. The lower ends of the pants collected from the ankles were to be visible from under the outerwear, so this part was sewn from more expensive and beautiful fabric and sewn (in Yerevan and Ararat) with gold embroidery or decorated (Syunik, Artsakh) with a strip of black velvet with gold-plated braid. In the women's complex of the provinces Syunik and Artsakh, an important part was the upper shirt – virvi khalav (Armenian: վիրվի հալավ) made of red silk or calico with round gate and chest incision with black velvet or satin, as well as sewn silver small jewelry.[15]

Outerwear

 
Armenian lady of New Julfa in Isfahan, 1850 by Janeta Lanzh

In the early 20th century, women's outerwear differed in great variety among Armenians. Its basis in Eastern Armenia was a long swing dress – arkhalugh with one-piece front shelves and a trimmed back, an elegant long neckline on the chest, fastened only at the waist. They sewed arkhalughs from sitz, satin or silk, usually blue, green or purple colors, lined in thin cotton vatina, lined with longitudinal lines and vertical lines on the sleeves. It was necessary to have two dresses: everyday dresses made of cotton and festive dresses made of expensive silk fabric.[18]

The clothes for the exit were a dress – mintana (Armenian: մինթանա), worn on solemn occasions on top of the arkhalig of the same cut, but without side seams.[1]

An integral part of traditional women's clothing was the belt. In the Ararat Valley, especially in the urban environment of Yerevan, the complex of women's clothing included a fabric silk belt with two long curtain rods embroidered with silk and gold threads. Syunik and Artsakh also used a leather belt with a large silver buckle and sewn silver plates made in the technique of engraving, filigree and black.[19]

Headgear

The most characteristic and complex part of Eastern Armenian taraz was a women's headdress. Before a woman was married, the hair was freely released back with several pigtails and tied to the head with a handkerchief. After marriage, the Armenian woman was to "tie her head", i.e. they put on a special "towagon" on her head – palti (Nagorno-Karabakh, Syunik), pali, poli (Meghri, Agulis), baspind (Yerevan, Ashtarak). Underneath it, a ribbon with coins (silver, very rich – with gold) or with special hangers was tied on the forehead, and silver balls hung on both sides of the face through the whiskey or interspersed with coral. The nose and mouth were tightly tied first with a white and then with a colored (red, green) handkerchief.[20]

Due to Islamic influences, many Armenian women wore a Chador when going outside per the rules of the dominant Persian or Turkish cultural norms.[5]

Western Armenia

 
Armenian girls from Trabzon, drawing by De Agostini 1905

The western Armenian variety of women's clothing was distinguished by a bright color scheme and rich decorative design. The bodywork in cut was similar to that of Eastern Armenia, with the only difference being that the shirts were sewn from white cotton fabric.

Outerwear

Western Armenian women wore a swinging one-piece dress – ant'ari. On top of the "antari" on solemn occasions, as well as in the cold season, a dress – juppa, was worn. This dress could be festive (burgundy, purple, blue velvet or silk, colored woolen fabric in stripes) and everyday (made of dark blue cloth).[21]

A distinctive feature of traditional women's clothing in Western Armenia was the apron – mezar. Made of cotton or expensive (velvet, cloth) fabrics, abundantly decorated (especially wedding), it was a necessary part of the outfit: as in the east it was "shameful" to go out with an open chin, so here it was "shameful" to appear without an apron.[22] The classic version of it is a red cloth apron in a set of Karin-Shirak's clothes with exquisite sewing and braid, which was tied to the "antari".

With such an apron, the open chest of the dress was covered with an embroidered bib – "krckal" rectangular or trapezoidal shape made of silk, velvet or woolen fabric, in girls and young women decorated with rich embroidery along the gate and on the chest, and "'juppa" was replaced by a jacket – "salta"" or "kurtik".[11] This swing short (to the waist) jacket was made of purple, blue, burgundy velvet or green, blue silk fabric. The jacket was festive clothes and struck by the beauty of patterned embroidery. Warm outerwear, in particular in Vaspurakan, was dalma, a kind of long coat made of black cloth lined. This swinging, waist-fitting and braided with braided gold and silk threads, the cut was similar to a "juppa". It was mainly worn by girls and young women.[23]

Headgear

 
Armenian woman from Mush in traditional dress, late 19th century

The women's headgear stood out for its special wealth and beauty. The girls braided their hair in numerous braids (up to 40), of which the front braids were thrown forward on the chest and with the help of silver chains were placed on the back. Experienced braiders skillfully braided woolen threads in the color of the hair, decorating them with silver balls and brushes. Decorated with silver jewelry and felt hat in the shape of a fezka without a brush, it was hung on chains in the front by a number of newcomers, leaves, chains, amulets. The temples had hanging hangers – eresnots. In many areas, a silver flat with minted flowers, images of angels, and sunlight, among others, was sewn on the felt from above.

When she got married, the woman put on a red hat made of the thinnest felt, with a long brush of purple or blue twisted silk threads of 40 cm long, in the southern regions – "kotik", in Karina Shirak "vard" (literally rose).

All this elegant colorful complex was complemented by a lot of jewelry: necklaces, pendants, bracelets, rings, as well as a silver or gold-plated belt with a massive buckle of amazingly fine jewelry. Most of them were the property of wealthy Armenian women, especially in the trade and crafts environment in many cities of Western Armenia and Transcaucasia.[2]

Footwear

 
Armenian man from Nagorno-Karabakh wearing Jorabs, postcard by Max Tilke

Since ancient times, footwear has been an integral part of traditional Armenian clothing. Men's and women's shoes (knitted socks and the actual shoes) were largely identical. Knitted patterned socks – Jorabs and gulpas, which, along with men's leggings, were known as early as the Urartian period and occupied an important place in Armenian footwear. In traditional everyday life, male and female patterned jorabs were knitted densely from the wool of a particular region. They could be monochromatic or multi-colored, with each region having its own favorite pattern and color. In the Ottoman Empire, Armenians and Jews were required to wear blue or purple shoes to denote their status as minorities. Later, Armenians had to wear red shoes to indicate to the Ottomans that they were Armenian.[5] They were widely used not only in everyday life, but also had ritual significance. Socks were part of the girl's dowry, and were one of the main objects of gift exchange at weddings and christenings. They were widespread throughout Armenia and remained in many areas until the 1960s.[2]

See also

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i L. M. Vardanyan, G. G. Sarkisyan, A. E. Ter-Sarkisyants (2012). Armenians / otv. ed. Institute of Archeology and Ethnography of NAS RA. pp. 247–274. ISBN 978-5-02-037563-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b c d e f Levon Abrahamian (2001). Nancy Sweezy (ed.). Armenian folk arts, culture, and identity. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253337047.
  3. ^ The Costumes of "Armenian Women” and “ARMENIA Crossroads of Culture- by Anahid V. Ordjanian
  4. ^ Patrick Arakel (1967). Armenian national clothing. Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR. page 16
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Jill Condra (2013). "Armenia". Encyclopedia of National Dress: Traditional Clothing Around the World. Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. pp. 31–43. ISBN 9780313376375.
  6. ^ Pardoe, Miss (Julia) (1836). The City of the Sultan; and Domestic Manners of the Turks. Cambridge University Press. p. 6. doi:10.1017/CBO9781107449954. ISBN 9781107449954.
  7. ^ Armenpress (29 July 2016). "Yerevan Taraz Fest to be held in Stepanakert". armenpress.am. Yerevan.
  8. ^ a b Avakyan N. H. Armenian folk clothes (19th and early 20th century). Yerevan, 1983. Pages 61–62
  9. ^ Аствацатурян, Э. Г. Оружие народов Кавказа, История оружия.
  10. ^ Alla Ervandovna Ter-Sarkisyanets "Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh", p. 628-629.
  11. ^ a b c d Lisician S. D. Essays on ethnography of pre-revolutionary Armenia // KES. 1955 Т. Я. С. 182–264
  12. ^ Arakel, Patrick (1967). Armenian Costume (in Armenian). Yerevan. p. 14.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ Naapetyan R. And the family and family ritual of the Armenians of Akhdznik. Yerevan, 2004. С. 52
  14. ^ Arakel Patrick. Armenian clothing from ancient times to the present day. Research and drawings of Arakel Patrick's album. Yerevan, 1967
  15. ^ a b c d Avakyan N. H. Armenian folk clothes (19th – early 20th centuries). Yerevan
  16. ^ L.S. Gushchyan (1916). Treasures of Western Armenia. Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation; Russian Museum of Ethnography. p. 52. ISBN 978-9939-9077-6-5. Man's hat Arakhchi
  17. ^ Torlakyan, B.G. The Costume of the Hamshen Armenians at the End of the 19th Century (in Armenian).
  18. ^ Lisitsian S. D. Armenians of Zangezur. Yerevan, 1969. C. 116
  19. ^ Avakyan A. N. Gladzor School of Armenian Miniatures. Yerevan, 1971. С. 216
  20. ^ Lisician S. D. Essays on ethnography of pre-revolutionary Armenia // KES. 1955 Т. Я. С. 224–225
  21. ^ N. Avagyan N. H. Armenian folk clothes (19th and early 20th century). Yerevan, 1983. Page 19
  22. ^ Lisician S. D. Essays on ethnography of pre-revolutionary Armenia // KES. 1955 Т. Я. С. 227–230
  23. ^ Avakyan N. H. Armenian folk clothes (19th and early 20th century). Yerevan, 1983. Page 30

Notes

  1. ^ Western Armenian pronunciation: daraz

Further reading

  • Chopoorian, Greg. “Continuity and Adaptation: The Changing Tale of Armenian Clothing.” Medieval History Magazine, 13 (September 2004): 29–35
  • Derzon, Manoog. Village of Parchanj General History (1600–1937). Boston: Baikar Press, 1938.
  • Hai Guin Society of Tehran. The Costumes of Armenian Women. Tehran: International Communicators, 1976.
  • Lind-Sinanian, Gary. Armenian Folk Costumes, A Coloring Book for Children. Watertown, Ma: Armenian Library and Museum, 2004.
  • Micklewight, Nancy. “Late-Nineteenth-Century Ottoman Wedding Costumes as Indicators of Social Change.” Muqarnas, 6 (1989): 161–174.
  • Scarce, Jennifer. Women's Costume of the Near and Middle East. London: St. Edmundsbury Press, 2003.

armenian, dress, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Armenian dress news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message The Armenian Taraz Armenian տարազ taraz a also known as Armenian traditional clothing reflects a rich cultural tradition Wool and fur were utilized by the Armenians along with the cotton that was grown in the fertile valleys During the Urartian period silk imported from China was used by royalty Later the Armenians cultivated silkworms and produced their own silk 1 2 Armenian girls from Erzurum in traditional dress Drawing by Alexandre Lacauchie 1847 Armenian couple from the Ararat Plain 19th century The collection of Armenian women s costumes begins during the Urartu time period wherein dresses were designed with creamy white silk embroidered with gold thread The costume was a replica of a medallion unearthed by archaeologists at Toprak Kale near Lake Van which some 3 000 years ago was the site of the capital of the Kingdom of Urartu 3 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Colors 2 Timeline 2 1 Ancient period 900 600 BCE 2 2 Classical period 600 BCE 600 CE 2 3 Medieval period 600 1600 CE 2 4 19th century 2 5 Nowadays 3 Men s clothing 3 1 Eastern Armenia 3 1 1 Belt clothes 3 1 2 Outerwear 3 1 3 Headgear 3 2 Western Armenia 3 3 Outerwear 3 4 Headgear 3 5 Hamshen 4 Women s clothing 4 1 Eastern Armenia 4 1 1 Clothes 4 1 2 Outerwear 4 1 3 Headgear 4 2 Western Armenia 4 2 1 Outerwear 4 2 2 Headgear 5 Footwear 6 See also 7 Gallery 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Further readingOverviewThe Armenian national costume having existed through long periods of historical development was one of the signals of self preservation for the Armenian culture Being in an area at the crossroads of diverse eastern styles Armenian dress is significant in not only borrowing but also often playing an influential role on neighboring nations 4 The costume can be divided into two main regions Western Armenians and Eastern Armenians Which in turn are divided into separate subregions nbsp Left to Right Western Armenian man New Julfa woman Yerevan woman Agulis woman Javakhk woman Eastern Armenian man The costume of the Armenians of Western Armenia is mainly divided into two regions 1 Areas of the Eastern Provinces Taron including Sasun Bardzr Hayk Vaspurakan and Baghesh 2 The regions of Sebastia Kayseri Cilicia in the western states and Kharberd Tigranakert in the south The first group kept closer to the traditions of the Armenian costume while in the second group the influence of some Anatolian cultures are seen Eastern Armenian costume can be divided into three regions 1 Syunik Artsakh Zangezur and Ayrarat 2 Goghtan Agulis Ordubad 3 Gandzak Gugark Shirak Javakhk Colors The Armenian costume is dominated by the colors of the four elements earth water air and fire According to the 14th century Armenian philosopher Grigor Tatatsi the Armenian costume is made to express the ancestral soil the whiteness of the water the red of the air and the yellow of the fire Apricot symbolizes prudence and common sense red symbolizes courage and martyrdom blue symbolizes heavenly justice white symbolizes purity Some of the techniques used in making these costumes have survived to this day and are actively used in the applied arts however there are techniques that have been lost Each province of Armenia stands out with its costume The famous centers of Armenian embroidery Van Vaspurakan Karin Shirak Syunik Artsakh Cilicia stand out with their rhythmic and stylistic description of ornaments color combinations and composition 1 TimelineAncient period 900 600 BCE The Urartians who were the predecessors to the Armenians wore a dress similar to that of Assyrians which consisted of short sleeved tunics worn bare or with a shawl surrounding it The Urartians decorated themselves with metal ornaments such as necklaces bracelets earrings and pins These metal ornaments were engraved with lion heads while necklaces of stone beads and long metal pins were draped across the body Metal belts were an important part of the Urartian costume as well The making of metal belts was considered an art form with magical scenes and animals being engraved into the belt in order to protect the wearer 5 Classical period 600 BCE 600 CE The traditional dress of Armenians underwent a significant shift following the emergence of the Kingdom of Armenia as a distinct political entity Armenian men wore fitted trousers and a distinct hat known as the Phrygian cap This later evolved into the balshik which is a flexible accessory that is worn by shepherds and religious leaders alike 5 Medieval period 600 1600 CE Based on the works of Armenian manuscripts as well as images found on churches coins and khachkars we can see that the Armenian elite wore clothing similar to that of Byzantine and Arab royalty such as Turbans Armenians held onto their unique traditions while also adopting from neighboring societies such as head coverings becoming commonplace for Armenian women 5 19th century In her 1836 novel titled The City of The Sultan and Domestic Manners of the Turks Julia Pardoe described the Armenian merchants she observed immediately upon disembarking in the port of Stamboul 6 As I looked on the fine countenances the noble figures and the animated expression of the party how did I deprecate their shaven heads and the use of the frightful calpac which I cannot more appropriately describe than by comparing it to the iron pots used in English kitchens inverted The graceful pelisse however almost makes amends for the monstrous head gear as its costly garniture of sable or marten skin falls back and reveals the robe of rich silk and the cachemire shawl folded about the waist Pardoe also mentions they wore bejeweled rings and carried in their hands pipes of almost countless cost Nowadays nbsp Armenian dancers in downtown Manhattan Armenian traditional clothing started to fall out of use in the 1920s and was almost completely replaced by modern clothing by the 1960s Today Armenian traditional clothing is mostly used for dance performances where girls put on an arkhalig and long dress to simulate taraz while boys wear dark colored loose pants and a fitted jacket In some areas of Armenia and Karabakh elderly women still wear a short headscarf Photo studios in Armenia allow for new generations to take pictures in traditional clothing and some women in recent times have begun to wear taraz again 5 An annual festival celebrating Armenian traditional dress known as Taraz Fest is hosted every year in Yerevan and Stepanakert by the Teryan cultural center and consists of showcases of the cultural dress 7 Men s clothingEastern Armenia nbsp Armenian man from Gyumri wearing chukha and papakh The basis of the Armenian men s body clothing was the lower shirt and pants They were sewn from homemade canvas at home The most common was the traditional tunic shaped men s shirt Shapik Armenian շապիկ made of two cloths 5 In an Armenian family men s clothes especially the head of the house were paid special attention as men judged the family as a whole by their appearance 2 The overall fashion of the Eastern Armenian costume was Caucasian close to similar clothing worn by neighboring peoples in the Caucasus such as Azerbaijanis Georgians Dagestanis and Chechens among others Belt clothes Men s body pants Vartik Armenian վարտիկ also votashor tuban or pohan differed from women s in that they did not have an applied decorative border at the bottom of the ankle their pants were tucked into knitted socks and windings A cap and vartic of traditional cut were worn in Armenia by men of all ages from young boys to the elderly 8 Ballovars shalvar Armenian շալվար were worn over the body pants They were sewn from homemade rough shaft fabric painted black less often dark blue or brown in the same fabric as the vartic 1 5 Outerwear nbsp Armenian warrior from Nagorno Karabakh wearing a Chukha and Papakha 1837 The basis of outer shoulder clothing in Eastern Armenia was Arkhalugh and Chukha Arkhalugh type clothing has a centuries old tradition among Armenians as evidenced by images on tombstones and medieval miniatures It was widespread and worn by the entire male population starting from boys aged 10 12 Arkhalugh was sewn from purchased fabrics satin eraser chintz shawl black blue brown tones lined Its decoration was a galun ribbon in the tone of the main material which was covered with a collar chest incision hem and sleeves In wealthy families such as in the merchant class of Yerevan along with the ribbon a silk cord was added 1 Arkhalugh Armenian արխալուղ a long tight waist jacket made of fabrics including silk satin cloth cashmere and velvet depending on the social status of its owner It was usually girded with a silver belt less often with a belt or a leather belt with false silver buttons 2 With a number of similarities to the Arkhalugh the Chukha Armenian չուխա had a wider functional purpose The Chukha is a male humeral outerwear with layers and gathers that was detachable at the waist It was made of cloth tirma and homespun textiles Outerwear served not only as warm clothes but as clothing for special occasions 8 Most chukhas were decorated with a bandolier for gazyr cartridges on both sides of the coat although Armenians would seldom wear the chukha with the cartridges inserted The right to wear a chukha symbolized a certain socio age status as a rule it was worn from the age of majority from 15 to 20 years The Chukhas were dressed in a mushtak or burka and later as an urban influence Sheepskin fur coat or mushtak as clothes were worn by the wealthy mainly of the older generation 2 Some Eastern Armenian men additionally chose to wear a dagger known as a Khanchal Armenian Խանչալ or Dashuyn Armenian Դաշույն over either the Chukha or the Arkhalugh It was suspended from either a leather or silver belt and hung diagonally across the man s waist 9 Such daggers were widespread throughout the Caucasus region including Armenia However due to the lack of the strong warrior culture that was present in the areas north of Armenia the dagger was a far less ubiquitous part of a man s outfit in Armenia than it was elsewhere in the region Burka Armenian այծենակաճ aitsenakach was the only cape in traditional Armenian costume Armenians wore two types of burqa fur and felt Fur burka was made of goat wool with fur outside using long pile fur Felt burka and in some areas fur Lori was worn by shepherds 5 This was often complete with a Bashlyk a type of hood which was suspended from the back of the Burka and worn over the Papakh to protect against rain The men s clothing complex also included a leather belt which was worn over the arkhalugh The leather belt had a silver buckle and false ornaments engraved with plant ornaments 5 Men s wedding clothes which were both festive and culturally significant were distinguished by the fact that the arkhalugh was made of more expensive fabric the chukha and shoelaces were red this color was considered to be a guardian and the belt was silver which they received during the wedding from the bride s parents This type of clothing of Karabakh men was also common among other Eastern Armenians in particular in Syunik Gogthan as well as in Lori 10 Headgear The standard headgear of Eastern Armenians was a fur hat Papakh Armenian փափախ sewn from sheep s skins 11 Papakhs came in a variety of different shapes and sizes with men of different regions and villages having different preferences Generally speaking men from Southern Armenia and Karabakh preferred a taller and more cylindrical style of papakh while men from Northern Armenia usually wore one that was low and wide The most expensive and prestigious was considered to be made from Bukhara sheep wool which was worn by representatives of the wealthy classes especially in cities In these cities very high close to cylindrical hats were worn complete with a chuhka with folding sleeves The headgear and hat in particular were the embodiment of the honor and dignity of an Armenian man Throwing his papakha on the ground was equated to his shame and dishonor According to traditional etiquette in certain situations the man was supposed to take off his hat at the entrance to church during funerals when meeting highly revered and respected people etc 1 Western Armenia nbsp A western Armenian man in the early 19th century by Louis Dupre Traditional Armenian clothing from Western Armenia was generally standard throughout despite regional differences and had a similar silhouette bright color scheme that was distinguished by colorfulness and an abundance of embroidery 1 Men s bodywear had a similar cut to the East Armenian wear However the body shirt was distinguished by a side section of the gate The body pants vartik were covered without a step wedge but with a wide insert strip of fabric as a result of which the width of such pants was often almost equal to their length They were made of woolen multicolored threads 1 The traditional clothing of some Western Armenian provinces namely those around lake Van was a regional form of dress rather than an ethnic one as many neighboring peoples such as Kurds also dressed in a similar fashion However as Armenians had a virtual monopoly on weaving and dress making in the region coupled with the fact that Armenians were the oldest living inhabitants of the area it is likely that it was adopted from Armenians by the neighboring peoples 12 Outerwear The gate and long sleeves of the upper shirt Ishlik were sewn with geometric patterns of red threads In a number of regions such as in Vaspurakan and Turuberan the sleeve of the shirt ended with a long hanging piece jalahiki The shirt was worn with a kind of vest a spruce tree with open breasts from under which the shirt s embroidered breasts were clearly visible Such a vest was a characteristic component of the traditional men s suit only in Western Armenia 13 From above a short waist to waisted woolen jacket was worn on the top a batchkon a one piece sleeved salt often quilted The wealthy Armenians chose the thinnest especially Shatakh cloth mostly of domestic and local handicrafts and tried to sew all parts of the suit from one fabric 11 On top of the top were worn short up to the waist swing clothes with short sleeves Kazakhik made of goat fur or felt aba The goat s jacket covered with braids at the edges and with bundles of fur on its shoulders was worn mainly by wealthy villagers 14 nbsp Ensemble from Sasun wearing Western Armenian Taraz The outer warm clothes also included a long straight Juppa In wealthier families the juppa was quilted and lined It was preferred to be worn by mature men In winter in some mainly mountainous regions Sasun wide fur coats made of sheepskin were worn without a belt The belt as an indispensable part of men s suit in most regions Western Armenia was distinguished by its originality The colored patterned belt was rather a bandage around the waist A long wide shawl knitted or woven folded in width in several layers was wrapped twice or more around the waist The deep folds of the belt served as a kind of pocket for a handkerchief kisset wallet For such a belt you could plug both a long tube and a knife with a handle and if necessary a dagger 11 The silver belt was an accessory of the city costume it was worn in Karin Kars Van and other centers of highly developed craftsmanship production Citizens artisans and wealthy peasants alike had belts made of massive silver plaques 1 Headgear nbsp Arakhchi XXI c The headgear in Western Armenia consisted of hats of various shapes spherical conical felt wool knitted and woven which were usually worn in addition to the handkerchief They had regional differences in the materials used to manufacture it as well as the style and color scheme of the ornament A felt white cone shaped hat was widespread koloz with a pointed or rounded top 15 The widespread arakhchi also known as arakhchin Armenian արախչի was a truncated skull cap knitted from wool or embroidered in single youth with multicolored woolen thread with a predominance of red 16 The way this traditional headdress was worn was a marker of its owner s marital condition just as in Eastern Armenia the right to wear an arakhicki belonged to a married man 15 Hamshen The Hamshen province of Armenia had its own unique costume sharing many similarities with the Caucasian costume found in Eastern Armenia It was generally close to similar clothing worn by the neighboring Laz Adjarian and Pontic Greek peoples By the end of the 19th century this costume included an undershirt a top cover shirt an Arkhalukh and a short Chukha which reached a little below the waist Hamshen Armenians traditionally wore very wide and long pants however by the end of the 19th century this was replaced by a thinner pair of trousers called zipkas worn with a pair of high boots A wool or silk belt 4 5 meters long was tied over the trousers nbsp Hamshen Armenian men In winter many villagers wore a Kepenek a felt outercoat similar to the Burka except with a hood to cover the head As everyday headwear men wore a Bashlyk made of silk or wool which was tied around the head to form a headband Men who owned arms completed their outfit with a series of firearms accessories a knife and a Khanchal dagger 17 Women s clothing nbsp Armenian woman from Shamakhi photo by F Orden 1897 Eastern Armenia At the beginning of the 20th century women s clothing unlike men s clothing still preserved its traditional complexes in historical and ethnographic regions Women s clothing of eastern and western Armenians was more homogeneous than men s clothing The main difference was the abundance of embroidery and jewelry in a women s suit from Western Armenia as opposed to Eastern Armenia Clothes In Armenia women wore a long red shirt halav made of cotton fabric with oblique wedges on the sides long straight sleeves with a gusset and a straight incision of the gate This shirt was worn mainly by girls and young women Long body pants were sewn from the same red fabric as the shirt on a white lining and waist held on hold with the help of honjang 15 Holiday pants were sewn in silk red fabric on a white fabric lining The lower ends of the pants collected from the ankles were to be visible from under the outerwear so this part was sewn from more expensive and beautiful fabric and sewn in Yerevan and Ararat with gold embroidery or decorated Syunik Artsakh with a strip of black velvet with gold plated braid In the women s complex of the provinces Syunik and Artsakh an important part was the upper shirt virvi khalav Armenian վիրվի հալավ made of red silk or calico with round gate and chest incision with black velvet or satin as well as sewn silver small jewelry 15 Outerwear nbsp Armenian lady of New Julfa in Isfahan 1850 by Janeta Lanzh In the early 20th century women s outerwear differed in great variety among Armenians Its basis in Eastern Armenia was a long swing dress arkhalugh with one piece front shelves and a trimmed back an elegant long neckline on the chest fastened only at the waist They sewed arkhalughs from sitz satin or silk usually blue green or purple colors lined in thin cotton vatina lined with longitudinal lines and vertical lines on the sleeves It was necessary to have two dresses everyday dresses made of cotton and festive dresses made of expensive silk fabric 18 The clothes for the exit were a dress mintana Armenian մինթանա worn on solemn occasions on top of the arkhalig of the same cut but without side seams 1 An integral part of traditional women s clothing was the belt In the Ararat Valley especially in the urban environment of Yerevan the complex of women s clothing included a fabric silk belt with two long curtain rods embroidered with silk and gold threads Syunik and Artsakh also used a leather belt with a large silver buckle and sewn silver plates made in the technique of engraving filigree and black 19 Headgear The most characteristic and complex part of Eastern Armenian taraz was a women s headdress Before a woman was married the hair was freely released back with several pigtails and tied to the head with a handkerchief After marriage the Armenian woman was to tie her head i e they put on a special towagon on her head palti Nagorno Karabakh Syunik pali poli Meghri Agulis baspind Yerevan Ashtarak Underneath it a ribbon with coins silver very rich with gold or with special hangers was tied on the forehead and silver balls hung on both sides of the face through the whiskey or interspersed with coral The nose and mouth were tightly tied first with a white and then with a colored red green handkerchief 20 Due to Islamic influences many Armenian women wore a Chador when going outside per the rules of the dominant Persian or Turkish cultural norms 5 Western Armenia nbsp Armenian girls from Trabzon drawing by De Agostini 1905 The western Armenian variety of women s clothing was distinguished by a bright color scheme and rich decorative design The bodywork in cut was similar to that of Eastern Armenia with the only difference being that the shirts were sewn from white cotton fabric Outerwear Western Armenian women wore a swinging one piece dress ant ari On top of the antari on solemn occasions as well as in the cold season a dress juppa was worn This dress could be festive burgundy purple blue velvet or silk colored woolen fabric in stripes and everyday made of dark blue cloth 21 A distinctive feature of traditional women s clothing in Western Armenia was the apron mezar Made of cotton or expensive velvet cloth fabrics abundantly decorated especially wedding it was a necessary part of the outfit as in the east it was shameful to go out with an open chin so here it was shameful to appear without an apron 22 The classic version of it is a red cloth apron in a set of Karin Shirak s clothes with exquisite sewing and braid which was tied to the antari With such an apron the open chest of the dress was covered with an embroidered bib krckal rectangular or trapezoidal shape made of silk velvet or woolen fabric in girls and young women decorated with rich embroidery along the gate and on the chest and juppa was replaced by a jacket salta or kurtik 11 This swing short to the waist jacket was made of purple blue burgundy velvet or green blue silk fabric The jacket was festive clothes and struck by the beauty of patterned embroidery Warm outerwear in particular in Vaspurakan was dalma a kind of long coat made of black cloth lined This swinging waist fitting and braided with braided gold and silk threads the cut was similar to a juppa It was mainly worn by girls and young women 23 Headgear nbsp Armenian woman from Mush in traditional dress late 19th century The women s headgear stood out for its special wealth and beauty The girls braided their hair in numerous braids up to 40 of which the front braids were thrown forward on the chest and with the help of silver chains were placed on the back Experienced braiders skillfully braided woolen threads in the color of the hair decorating them with silver balls and brushes Decorated with silver jewelry and felt hat in the shape of a fezka without a brush it was hung on chains in the front by a number of newcomers leaves chains amulets The temples had hanging hangers eresnots In many areas a silver flat with minted flowers images of angels and sunlight among others was sewn on the felt from above When she got married the woman put on a red hat made of the thinnest felt with a long brush of purple or blue twisted silk threads of 40 cm long in the southern regions kotik in Karina Shirak vard literally rose All this elegant colorful complex was complemented by a lot of jewelry necklaces pendants bracelets rings as well as a silver or gold plated belt with a massive buckle of amazingly fine jewelry Most of them were the property of wealthy Armenian women especially in the trade and crafts environment in many cities of Western Armenia and Transcaucasia 2 Footwear nbsp Armenian man from Nagorno Karabakh wearing Jorabs postcard by Max Tilke Since ancient times footwear has been an integral part of traditional Armenian clothing Men s and women s shoes knitted socks and the actual shoes were largely identical Knitted patterned socks Jorabs and gulpas which along with men s leggings were known as early as the Urartian period and occupied an important place in Armenian footwear In traditional everyday life male and female patterned jorabs were knitted densely from the wool of a particular region They could be monochromatic or multi colored with each region having its own favorite pattern and color In the Ottoman Empire Armenians and Jews were required to wear blue or purple shoes to denote their status as minorities Later Armenians had to wear red shoes to indicate to the Ottomans that they were Armenian 5 They were widely used not only in everyday life but also had ritual significance Socks were part of the girl s dowry and were one of the main objects of gift exchange at weddings and christenings They were widespread throughout Armenia and remained in many areas until the 1960s 2 See alsoArmenian culture Armenian danceGallery nbsp Bridal dress from Shamakh 19th century nbsp Cilician bride nbsp New Julfa taraz embroidered by hand 16th to 17th century nbsp Chaharmahal woman nbsp Talin taraz nbsp Vostan taraz nbsp During Bagratuni dynasty featuring ermine 9th to 12th century nbsp Syunik taraz 18th century nbsp Kharberd taraz nbsp Shatakh Vaspurakan taraz with ornamented hat teasels and plaits nbsp Taraz of Lower Hayk nbsp Bridal dress of Akhaltsikha 19th century nbsp Armenian traditional clothing nbsp Girls in Armenian National Dress nbsp Armenian singer Sirusho in Vaspurakan Taraz for her PreGomesh music video nbsp Armenian men from Gyumri nbsp Traditional wedding ceremony of slaughtering a bull early 20th century Lori nbsp Armenian from Lake Van region nbsp Prince Mkrtich Artsruni with his wife Srbuhi in Gavar 19th centuryReferences nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Traditional clothing of Armenia a b c d e f g h i L M Vardanyan G G Sarkisyan A E Ter Sarkisyants 2012 Armenians otv ed Institute of Archeology and Ethnography of NAS RA pp 247 274 ISBN 978 5 02 037563 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f Levon Abrahamian 2001 Nancy Sweezy ed Armenian folk arts culture and identity Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253337047 The Costumes of Armenian Women and ARMENIA Crossroads of Culture by Anahid V Ordjanian Patrick Arakel 1967 Armenian national clothing Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR page 16 a b c d e f g h i j Jill Condra 2013 Armenia Encyclopedia of National Dress Traditional Clothing Around the World Vol 1 ABC CLIO pp 31 43 ISBN 9780313376375 Pardoe Miss Julia 1836 The City of the Sultan and Domestic Manners of the Turks Cambridge University Press p 6 doi 10 1017 CBO9781107449954 ISBN 9781107449954 Armenpress 29 July 2016 Yerevan Taraz Fest to be held in Stepanakert armenpress am Yerevan a b Avakyan N H Armenian folk clothes 19th and early 20th century Yerevan 1983 Pages 61 62 Astvacaturyan E G Oruzhie narodov Kavkaza Istoriya oruzhiya Alla Ervandovna Ter Sarkisyanets Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh p 628 629 a b c d Lisician S D Essays on ethnography of pre revolutionary Armenia KES 1955 T Ya S 182 264 Arakel Patrick 1967 Armenian Costume in Armenian Yerevan p 14 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Naapetyan R And the family and family ritual of the Armenians of Akhdznik Yerevan 2004 S 52 Arakel Patrick Armenian clothing from ancient times to the present day Research and drawings of Arakel Patrick s album Yerevan 1967 a b c d Avakyan N H Armenian folk clothes 19th early 20th centuries Yerevan L S Gushchyan 1916 Treasures of Western Armenia Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation Russian Museum of Ethnography p 52 ISBN 978 9939 9077 6 5 Man s hat Arakhchi Torlakyan B G The Costume of the Hamshen Armenians at the End of the 19th Century in Armenian Lisitsian S D Armenians of Zangezur Yerevan 1969 C 116 Avakyan A N Gladzor School of Armenian Miniatures Yerevan 1971 S 216 Lisician S D Essays on ethnography of pre revolutionary Armenia KES 1955 T Ya S 224 225 N Avagyan N H Armenian folk clothes 19th and early 20th century Yerevan 1983 Page 19 Lisician S D Essays on ethnography of pre revolutionary Armenia KES 1955 T Ya S 227 230 Avakyan N H Armenian folk clothes 19th and early 20th century Yerevan 1983 Page 30 Notes Western Armenian pronunciation daraz Further reading Chopoorian Greg Continuity and Adaptation The Changing Tale of Armenian Clothing Medieval History Magazine 13 September 2004 29 35 Derzon Manoog Village of Parchanj General History 1600 1937 Boston Baikar Press 1938 Hai Guin Society of Tehran The Costumes of Armenian Women Tehran International Communicators 1976 Lind Sinanian Gary Armenian Folk Costumes A Coloring Book for Children Watertown Ma Armenian Library and Museum 2004 Micklewight Nancy Late Nineteenth Century Ottoman Wedding Costumes as Indicators of Social Change Muqarnas 6 1989 161 174 Scarce Jennifer Women s Costume of the Near and Middle East London St Edmundsbury Press 2003 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Armenian dress amp oldid 1212203817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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