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Mianguan

Mianguan, also called benkan (冕冠, lit.'ceremonial headdress') in Japan, myeonlyugwan in Korea, and Miện quan in Vietnam, is a type of crown that was traditionally worn by the Emperors of China, Japan, Korea, and kings in the cultural sphere of East Asia.[1]

A mianguan in the Ding Ling Tomb Museum within the Ming Tombs.

The mianguan is a type of crown that originated in China; it was worn by the Emperor, by his ministers,[2] and by aristocrats.[3] Among all the type of Chinese headwear, the mianguan was the most expensive type; it was reserved especially for important sacrificial events.[2] Regulations on the shape and its making was set during the Eastern Han dynasty and used in the succeeding dynasties only to be ended at the fall of the Ming dynasty in the 16th century AD.[2]

In Japan, the benkan has been worn by Emperors as a crown since the Nara period when the Chinese-style mianguan was introduced from the Tang dynasty.[4] Emperor Shōmu was reported to be the first emperor in Japan to be fully dressed into mianfu (a form of Chinese ceremonial clothing), which included the Chinese-style mianguan in 732 AD during the New Year court assembly.[4]

It is also used in Vietnam,[a] and the monarchs of the Joseon Dynasty also wore the equivalent myeonlyugwan.

Mianguan (China)

 
Mianguan from the tomb of Ming dynasty prince Zhu Tan, 10th son of the Hongwu Emperor

In ancient China, the mianguan was worn by the Emperor and by his ministers,[2] and by aristocrats.[3] Among all the type of Chinese headwear, the mianguan was the most expensive type; it was reserved especially for important sacrificial events.[2]

The mianguan along with the mianfu was used since the Zhou dynasty.[6] The mianfu system was abolished in the Qin dynasty by the First Emperor of Qin and adopted the shenyi system instead,[7] the mianguan was however recorded.[6] The mianguan was not used in Western Han.[citation needed][clarification needed] In the Qin and Western Han, the emperor would wear another type of crown known as the juanxuan.[6]

In the Eastern Han, Emperor Ming created new clothing regulations for sacrificial rituals and official occasions, prescribing which types of clothing and accessories were allowed to be worn by people of different social rank; this included the mianguan.[3] According to the new regulations, the mianguan was supposed to be worn along with the official clothing only by the emperor, princes, dukes, and ministers on important ritual occasions.[3] The revived crown based on the literature, after which it was then used in rituals and important ceremonies in various dynasties.[citation needed][clarification needed] However, there are mutual contradictions in the descriptions of the documents and their ancient notes, and each dynasty often revised them.[citation needed]

Regulations on the shape and its making was set during the Eastern Han dynasty and used in the succeeding dynasties only to be ended at the fall of the Ming dynasty in the 16th century AD.[2] The basic shape of the Chinese mianguan remained the same from ancient times to the Ming Dynasty. The crown worn by the Ming Dynasty's Wanli Emperor has been excavated from the Dingling Mausoleum, while the one showed in the painting, "Illustrated Scrolls of the Emperors of the dynasties", by Yan Liben depicts the emperors from the Former Han Dynasty to the Sui Dynasty, where the mianguan is almost the same shape as the crown depicted, with minor differences in decorum.

Many of the non-Han Chinese dynasties that ruled China also adopted the mianguan. (Liao, which did not adopt the ritual system of the Han dynasty, and Yuan, which is considered to have a strong Mongolian flavor, also adopted the mianguan.)[citation needed]

 

The mianguan stopped being used in China since the fall of the Ming dynasty[2] and the establishment of the Qing dynasty by the Manchu. Instead, a unique Manchu crown called the 'morning crown' (mahala in Manchu) was used. The Manchu crown was shaped like an umbrella, and the top of the crown was decorated with a special pearl-encrusted ornament called the morning pearl.[citation needed]

Benkan (Japan)

Emperor's crown

The benkan is a type of ceremonial crown in Japan, also known as the Emperor's ceremonial crown, and was once used together with mianfu (imperial robes) in ceremonies such as accession to the throne and morning prayers. In the Kojidan, it is said that "the crown at the time of the Daijosai is that of Emperor Ōjin", and that the crown of Emperor Ōjin was used at the Daijosai until the Heian and Kamakura periods. However, the crown has not survived to the present day.[8]

Among the Shōsōin treasures, there is a benkan worn by Emperor Shōmu that has been damaged and is called Onkamuri Zanketsu. The crown does not retain its original form, but there are metal openwork pieces with phoenix, clouds and arabesque patterns, as well as pearls, coral and glass beads threaded through the crown.[9]

The benkan worn by Japanese emperors is often referred to as a "Tang-style crown", but it is actually quite different from the mianguan worn in China. The benkan worn by the emperor in the Edo period consisted of a metal frame placed on top of an openwork gilt-bronze base called the "heavenly crown", with forty-eight jewels hanging from the edge of the frame, twelve on each side.[10]

The painting Silken Painting of Emperor Go-Daigo prominently displays the Benkan of Emperor Go-Daigo which is said to be the crown of Emperor Jimmu.[11] The crown differs greatly from the Chinese crown, in that there is a bright vermillion sun decoration protruding from the front of the crown.[12] The crown has twelve tassels spread across all sides rather than merely two as in the Chinese form (six strands as only two sides of the crown are shown in the image), indicating that this is the crown used by the emperor when he is dressed in formal attire.[13]

The benkan worn by Emperor Go-Sai and his successors during the coronation ceremony is preserved in the Imperial Collection of the Kyoto Imperial Palace.[citation needed]

The benkan was used until the coronation of Emperor Kōmei,[citation needed] but since Emperor Meiji, the benkan has been replaced by a kanmuri as the government reformed the coronation to be more Shinto-based rather than Chinese inspired.[14]

Empress' crown (hokan)

 
Hokan

The crown of an Empress is called a hokan (宝冠). Whether it can be considered as a type of benkan or a different type of crown is a matter of opinion.[15]

The hokan does not have a crown board or similar metal frame on top of the crown, and there is no hair hanging from the crown board. The other difference between the hokan and the benkan is the phoenix attached to the front of the hokan. There are ornaments hanging from both ears and the beak of the phoenix, which are decorated with flowers. However, the top of the head is decorated with the same sun emblem as the benkan and the same design of Yatagarasu and Zuiun. The hokan is accompanied by a hairpin, a foreign object and a small bow.[citation needed]

The Order of the Precious Crown, established in 1888 (the 21st year of the Meiji) to be awarded to women, is a reference to this, and the center of the insignia is decorated with the image of a precious hokan.[15]

Miện quan (Vietnam)

The Chinese-style mianguan was also used in Vietnam, where it was known as the miện quan.[9]

Construction and design

 
Mianguan diagram:
  1. Extension;
  2. Tianhe belt;
  3. Cap and roll;
  4. Tassels;
  5. Ears;
  6. Tail;
  7. Wu ();
  8. Jade hairpin

The mianguan is composed of:

A long, rectangular wooden board called the mianguan board (yan in the Han dynasty)[3] was placed on top of the mianguan, with fulls hanging from the front and back of the mianguan board.

In the Han dynasty, the yan was round in the front but flat in the back; it was about 7 inches (180 mm) in width and 1 foot (0.30 m) in length.[3] On both sides of the mianguan, there was a hole where an emerald hairpin could pass through so that the crown could be fastened to the hair bun of its wearer.[3] A red band called the tianhe was attached to the centre of the mianguan and wraps around it.[citation needed] The silk cord was tied on one end of the hairpin and would then be tied on the other side of the hairpin passing under the chin.[3] There was also a chong er (lit.'stuffing the ear') located on both side of the mianguan around the ear area; the chong er was a pearl or a piece of jade which symbolized that the wearer of mianguan should not believe in any slander.[3]

The number of tassels depended on the status of the wearer, and the mianguan of the Emperor had 12 tassels at the front and back, for a total of 24 tassels.[16] The 12 tassels dangles down the shoulders and were made of jade beads of multiple colours which would sway with the wearer's movement.[17]

In addition, there was the nine-tasselled crown, worn by dukes and the Crown Prince's servants.[18][19] The eight-tasselled crown was worn by princes and dukes.[20] The qiliu mian (七旒冕, seven-tasselled crown) was worn by ministers.[21] The five-tasselled crown (wuiu mian, 五旒冕) was worn by viscounts and barons.[citation needed]

The quantity and quality of the jewellery were an important marker of social ranking.[3] In the Han dynasty, the emperor would use 12 strings of white jade, 7 strings of blue jade were used by dukes and princes, and black jade were used for ministers.[3]

Cultural significance

The mianguan was designed to strengthen the charismatic authority of its wearer which was conferred by the head.[17] This is similar to the Mandate of Heaven concept in which there is a rationalization of divine authority.[17]

Related items

Since China was a crown-wearing culture, there were many crowns for different ranks, positions, and times.[22]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ The crown of the emperor during the Nguyễn dynasty is housed in the Vietnam National Museum of History.[5]

Sources

  1. ^ 字通,世界大百科事典内言及, 精選版 日本国語大辞典,ブリタニカ国際大百科事典 小項目事典,デジタル大辞泉,普及版. "冕冠とは". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-01-18.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Hua, Mei (2011). Chinese clothing (Updated ed.). Cambridge, United Kingdom. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-521-18689-6. OCLC 781020660.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k 5000 years of Chinese costumes. Xun Zhou, Chunming Gao, 周汛, Shanghai Shi xi qu xue xiao. Zhongguo fu zhuang shi yan jiu zu. San Francisco, CA: China Books & Periodicals. 1987. pp. 32, 34. ISBN 0-8351-1822-3. OCLC 19814728.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ a b Dorothy Ko; JaHyun Kim Haboush; Joan R. Piggott, eds. (2003). Women and Confucian cultures in premodern China, Korea, and Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 978-0-520-92782-7. OCLC 55856968.
  5. ^ (in Japanese). Kyushu National Museum. Archived from the original on 2013-03-28. Retrieved 2013-05-12. Successive Emperors of the Nguyen Dynasty wore a crown called a Benkan, which had a rectangular plate on top of its head and twelve [strings] of colorful beads lined up [on a] red string in the front and back [each].
  6. ^ a b c Xie, Hong; Yan, Lan-Lan (2019). To Explore the Changes in Dress System Affected by Imperial Politics Thinking during Sui and Tang Dynasties. Atlantis Press. pp. 26–30. doi:10.2991/sschd-18.2019.5. ISBN 978-94-6252-659-4. S2CID 159383691.
  7. ^ Feng, Ge (2015). Traditional Chinese rites and rituals. Zhengming Du. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-1-4438-8783-0. OCLC 935642485.
  8. ^ 源顕兼 (November 2020). 古事談. ISBN 978-4-04-400557-3. OCLC 1223314021.
  9. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2022-01-18. Retrieved 2022-01-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ "冠とは - きもの用語大全". www.so-bien.com. Retrieved 2022-01-18.
  11. ^ 内田 2006, pp. 148–149.
  12. ^ 遠山 2014, p. 31.
  13. ^ 黒田 1993, pp. 253–254.
  14. ^ https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/bitstream/handle/1808/25745/Miller_ku_0099D_14658_DATA_1.pdf?sequence=1 page 29
  15. ^ a b "Orders of the Precious Crown : Decorations and Medals in Japan - Cabinet Office Home Page". www8.cao.go.jp. Retrieved 2022-01-18.
  16. ^ "周礼注疏/卷三十二 - 维基文库,自由的图书馆". zh.wikisource.org (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved 2022-01-20.
  17. ^ a b c Zhang, Fa (2016). History and spirit of chinese art. Volume 1, From prehistory to the Tang Dynasty. Honolulu: Silkroad Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-62320-126-5. OCLC 933441686.
  18. ^ "32". Rites of Zhou. 诸侯之缫斿九就...每缫九成,则九旒也。
  19. ^ "25". Book of Jin. 皇太子...其侍祀则平冕九旒
  20. ^ "25". Book of Jin. 王公八旒。
  21. ^ "25". Book of Jin. 卿七旒。
  22. ^ Han, Myun-Sook; Im, Sung-Kyung (2005). "A Study on the Artificial Flowers as a Hair Ornament in China" (PDF). Proceedings of the Costume Culture Conference (복식문화학회:학술대회논문집). The Costume Culture Association: 67–69. Archived from the original on 2021.
  23. ^ Yang, Shaorong (2004). Traditional Chinese clothing: costumes, adornments & culture. San Francisco: Long River Press. ISBN 978-1-59265-019-4. OCLC 52775158.
  24. ^ Press, Beijing Foreign Language (2012-09-01). Chinese Auspicious Culture. Asiapac Books Pte Ltd. ISBN 978-981-229-642-9.

Bibliography

  • 松平乘昌『図説宮中柳営の秘宝』 河出書房新社、2006年。ISBN 4-309-76081-3
  • 閻歩克 [zh]『服周之冕』中華書局、2009年。
  • 阿部, 泰郎 (2013), 中世日本の宗教テクスト体系, 名古屋大学出版会, ISBN 978-4815807238
  • 内田, 啓一 (2006), 文観房弘真と美術, 法藏館, ISBN 978-4831876393
  • 黒田, 日出男 (1993), 王の身体 王の肖像, イメージ・リーディング叢書, 平凡社, ISBN 978-4582284706
  • 遠山, 元浩 (2014). 清浄光寺蔵「後醍醐天皇像」関連史料の一考察. 駒沢女子大学研究紀要 (in Japanese). 出版社不明. 21 (21): 27–44. doi:10.18998/00001184.

External links

mianguan, 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, january, 2022, le. 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 Mianguan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mianguan also called benkan 冕冠 lit ceremonial headdress in Japan myeonlyugwan in Korea and Miện quan in Vietnam is a type of crown that was traditionally worn by the Emperors of China Japan Korea and kings in the cultural sphere of East Asia 1 A mianguan in the Ding Ling Tomb Museum within the Ming Tombs The mianguan is a type of crown that originated in China it was worn by the Emperor by his ministers 2 and by aristocrats 3 Among all the type of Chinese headwear the mianguan was the most expensive type it was reserved especially for important sacrificial events 2 Regulations on the shape and its making was set during the Eastern Han dynasty and used in the succeeding dynasties only to be ended at the fall of the Ming dynasty in the 16th century AD 2 In Japan the benkan has been worn by Emperors as a crown since the Nara period when the Chinese style mianguan was introduced from the Tang dynasty 4 Emperor Shōmu was reported to be the first emperor in Japan to be fully dressed into mianfu a form of Chinese ceremonial clothing which included the Chinese style mianguan in 732 AD during the New Year court assembly 4 It is also used in Vietnam a and the monarchs of the Joseon Dynasty also wore the equivalent myeonlyugwan Contents 1 Mianguan China 2 Benkan Japan 2 1 Emperor s crown 2 2 Empress crown hokan 3 Miện quan Vietnam 4 Construction and design 4 1 Cultural significance 4 2 Related items 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksMianguan China Edit Mianguan from the tomb of Ming dynasty prince Zhu Tan 10th son of the Hongwu Emperor In ancient China the mianguan was worn by the Emperor and by his ministers 2 and by aristocrats 3 Among all the type of Chinese headwear the mianguan was the most expensive type it was reserved especially for important sacrificial events 2 The mianguan along with the mianfu was used since the Zhou dynasty 6 The mianfu system was abolished in the Qin dynasty by the First Emperor of Qin and adopted the shenyi system instead 7 the mianguan was however recorded 6 The mianguan was not used in Western Han citation needed clarification needed In the Qin and Western Han the emperor would wear another type of crown known as the juanxuan 6 In the Eastern Han Emperor Ming created new clothing regulations for sacrificial rituals and official occasions prescribing which types of clothing and accessories were allowed to be worn by people of different social rank this included the mianguan 3 According to the new regulations the mianguan was supposed to be worn along with the official clothing only by the emperor princes dukes and ministers on important ritual occasions 3 The revived crown based on the literature after which it was then used in rituals and important ceremonies in various dynasties citation needed clarification needed However there are mutual contradictions in the descriptions of the documents and their ancient notes and each dynasty often revised them citation needed Regulations on the shape and its making was set during the Eastern Han dynasty and used in the succeeding dynasties only to be ended at the fall of the Ming dynasty in the 16th century AD 2 The basic shape of the Chinese mianguan remained the same from ancient times to the Ming Dynasty The crown worn by the Ming Dynasty s Wanli Emperor has been excavated from the Dingling Mausoleum while the one showed in the painting Illustrated Scrolls of the Emperors of the dynasties by Yan Liben depicts the emperors from the Former Han Dynasty to the Sui Dynasty where the mianguan is almost the same shape as the crown depicted with minor differences in decorum Liu Bei of Shu wearing the mianguan Mianguan excavated from the mausoleum of Wanli Emperor in Ming dynasty The mianguan of Wanli Emperor He is wearing the same mianguan as the mianguan in the left picture Mianguan with 9 strings Ming dynasty Many of the non Han Chinese dynasties that ruled China also adopted the mianguan Liao which did not adopt the ritual system of the Han dynasty and Yuan which is considered to have a strong Mongolian flavor also adopted the mianguan citation needed The mianguan stopped being used in China since the fall of the Ming dynasty 2 and the establishment of the Qing dynasty by the Manchu Instead a unique Manchu crown called the morning crown mahala in Manchu was used The Manchu crown was shaped like an umbrella and the top of the crown was decorated with a special pearl encrusted ornament called the morning pearl citation needed Benkan Japan EditEmperor s crown Edit The benkan is a type of ceremonial crown in Japan also known as the Emperor s ceremonial crown and was once used together with mianfu imperial robes in ceremonies such as accession to the throne and morning prayers In the Kojidan it is said that the crown at the time of the Daijosai is that of Emperor Ōjin and that the crown of Emperor Ōjin was used at the Daijosai until the Heian and Kamakura periods However the crown has not survived to the present day 8 Among the Shōsōin treasures there is a benkan worn by Emperor Shōmu that has been damaged and is called Onkamuri Zanketsu The crown does not retain its original form but there are metal openwork pieces with phoenix clouds and arabesque patterns as well as pearls coral and glass beads threaded through the crown 9 The benkan worn by Japanese emperors is often referred to as a Tang style crown but it is actually quite different from the mianguan worn in China The benkan worn by the emperor in the Edo period consisted of a metal frame placed on top of an openwork gilt bronze base called the heavenly crown with forty eight jewels hanging from the edge of the frame twelve on each side 10 The painting Silken Painting of Emperor Go Daigo prominently displays the Benkan of Emperor Go Daigo which is said to be the crown of Emperor Jimmu 11 The crown differs greatly from the Chinese crown in that there is a bright vermillion sun decoration protruding from the front of the crown 12 The crown has twelve tassels spread across all sides rather than merely two as in the Chinese form six strands as only two sides of the crown are shown in the image indicating that this is the crown used by the emperor when he is dressed in formal attire 13 The benkan worn by Emperor Go Sai and his successors during the coronation ceremony is preserved in the Imperial Collection of the Kyoto Imperial Palace citation needed The benkan was used until the coronation of Emperor Kōmei citation needed but since Emperor Meiji the benkan has been replaced by a kanmuri as the government reformed the coronation to be more Shinto based rather than Chinese inspired 14 Emperor Go Daigo wearing a benkan Bunkan ja Buddhabhiṣeka Silken Painting of Emperor Go Daigo A benkan board with gold leaf is placed on top of the hanging tail crown and a sun decoration is placed on top of it A bridle hangs from the crown board View of a benkan The actual crown of almost the same shape has been handed down to the imperial family The benkan of Emperor Komei Empress crown hokan Edit Hokan The crown of an Empress is called a hokan 宝冠 Whether it can be considered as a type of benkan or a different type of crown is a matter of opinion 15 The hokan does not have a crown board or similar metal frame on top of the crown and there is no hair hanging from the crown board The other difference between the hokan and the benkan is the phoenix attached to the front of the hokan There are ornaments hanging from both ears and the beak of the phoenix which are decorated with flowers However the top of the head is decorated with the same sun emblem as the benkan and the same design of Yatagarasu and Zuiun The hokan is accompanied by a hairpin a foreign object and a small bow citation needed The Order of the Precious Crown established in 1888 the 21st year of the Meiji to be awarded to women is a reference to this and the center of the insignia is decorated with the image of a precious hokan 15 Miện quan Vietnam EditThe Chinese style mianguan was also used in Vietnam where it was known as the miện quan 9 Khải Định of Nguyễn dynasty wearing a garment and miện quan Khải Định of Nguyễn dynasty wearing a miện quanConstruction and design Edit Mianguan diagram Extension Tianhe belt Cap and roll Tassels Ears Tail Wu 武 Jade hairpin The mianguan is composed of A long rectangular wooden board called the mianguan board yan in the Han dynasty 3 was placed on top of the mianguan with fulls hanging from the front and back of the mianguan board In the Han dynasty the yan was round in the front but flat in the back it was about 7 inches 180 mm in width and 1 foot 0 30 m in length 3 On both sides of the mianguan there was a hole where an emerald hairpin could pass through so that the crown could be fastened to the hair bun of its wearer 3 A red band called the tianhe was attached to the centre of the mianguan and wraps around it citation needed The silk cord was tied on one end of the hairpin and would then be tied on the other side of the hairpin passing under the chin 3 There was also a chong er lit stuffing the ear located on both side of the mianguan around the ear area the chong er was a pearl or a piece of jade which symbolized that the wearer of mianguan should not believe in any slander 3 The number of tassels depended on the status of the wearer and the mianguan of the Emperor had 12 tassels at the front and back for a total of 24 tassels 16 The 12 tassels dangles down the shoulders and were made of jade beads of multiple colours which would sway with the wearer s movement 17 In addition there was the nine tasselled crown worn by dukes and the Crown Prince s servants 18 19 The eight tasselled crown was worn by princes and dukes 20 The qiliu mian 七旒冕 seven tasselled crown was worn by ministers 21 The five tasselled crown wuiu mian 五旒冕 was worn by viscounts and barons citation needed The quantity and quality of the jewellery were an important marker of social ranking 3 In the Han dynasty the emperor would use 12 strings of white jade 7 strings of blue jade were used by dukes and princes and black jade were used for ministers 3 Cultural significance Edit The mianguan was designed to strengthen the charismatic authority of its wearer which was conferred by the head 17 This is similar to the Mandate of Heaven concept in which there is a rationalization of divine authority 17 Related items Edit Main article List of Hanfu headwear Since China was a crown wearing culture there were many crowns for different ranks positions and times 22 Feng Guan a crown worn by an empress e g Phoenix Crown zh crowns of Empress Xiao Danxian and Empress Dowager Xiao Jing excavated from the Dingling site two each 23 24 See also EditHakkō ichiu Imperial crown List of Hanfu headwear Raikan ja References EditNotes The crown of the emperor during the Nguyễn dynasty is housed in the Vietnam National Museum of History 5 Sources 字通 世界大百科事典内言及 精選版 日本国語大辞典 ブリタニカ国際大百科事典 小項目事典 デジタル大辞泉 普及版 冕冠とは コトバンク in Japanese Retrieved 2022 01 18 a b c d e f g Hua Mei 2011 Chinese clothing Updated ed Cambridge United Kingdom p 54 ISBN 978 0 521 18689 6 OCLC 781020660 a b c d e f g h i j k 5000 years of Chinese costumes Xun Zhou Chunming Gao 周汛 Shanghai Shi xi qu xue xiao Zhongguo fu zhuang shi yan jiu zu San Francisco CA China Books amp Periodicals 1987 pp 32 34 ISBN 0 8351 1822 3 OCLC 19814728 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Dorothy Ko JaHyun Kim Haboush Joan R Piggott eds 2003 Women and Confucian cultures in premodern China Korea and Japan Berkeley University of California Press pp 48 49 ISBN 978 0 520 92782 7 OCLC 55856968 Special Exhibition The Great Vietnam Exhibition in Japanese Kyushu National Museum Archived from the original on 2013 03 28 Retrieved 2013 05 12 Successive Emperors of the Nguyen Dynasty wore a crown called a Benkan which had a rectangular plate on top of its head and twelve strings of colorful beads lined up on a red string in the front and back each a b c Xie Hong Yan Lan Lan 2019 To Explore the Changes in Dress System Affected by Imperial Politics Thinking during Sui and Tang Dynasties Atlantis Press pp 26 30 doi 10 2991 sschd 18 2019 5 ISBN 978 94 6252 659 4 S2CID 159383691 Feng Ge 2015 Traditional Chinese rites and rituals Zhengming Du Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 15 16 ISBN 978 1 4438 8783 0 OCLC 935642485 源顕兼 November 2020 古事談 ISBN 978 4 04 400557 3 OCLC 1223314021 a b Archived copy Archived from the original on 2022 01 18 Retrieved 2022 01 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link 冠とは きもの用語大全 www so bien com Retrieved 2022 01 18 内田 2006 pp 148 149 遠山 2014 p 31 黒田 1993 pp 253 254 https kuscholarworks ku edu bitstream handle 1808 25745 Miller ku 0099D 14658 DATA 1 pdf sequence 1 page 29 a b Orders of the Precious Crown Decorations and Medals in Japan Cabinet Office Home Page www8 cao go jp Retrieved 2022 01 18 周礼注疏 卷三十二 维基文库 自由的图书馆 zh wikisource org in Simplified Chinese Retrieved 2022 01 20 a b c Zhang Fa 2016 History and spirit of chinese art Volume 1 From prehistory to the Tang Dynasty Honolulu Silkroad Press p 13 ISBN 978 1 62320 126 5 OCLC 933441686 32 Rites of Zhou 诸侯之缫斿九就 每缫九成 则九旒也 25 Book of Jin 皇太子 其侍祀则平冕九旒 25 Book of Jin 王公八旒 25 Book of Jin 卿七旒 Han Myun Sook Im Sung Kyung 2005 A Study on the Artificial Flowers as a Hair Ornament in China PDF Proceedings of the Costume Culture Conference 복식문화학회 학술대회논문집 The Costume Culture Association 67 69 Archived from the original on 2021 Yang Shaorong 2004 Traditional Chinese clothing costumes adornments amp culture San Francisco Long River Press ISBN 978 1 59265 019 4 OCLC 52775158 Press Beijing Foreign Language 2012 09 01 Chinese Auspicious Culture Asiapac Books Pte Ltd ISBN 978 981 229 642 9 Bibliography Edit松平乘昌 図説宮中柳営の秘宝 河出書房新社 2006年 ISBN 4 309 76081 3 閻歩克 zh 服周之冕 中華書局 2009年 阿部 泰郎 2013 中世日本の宗教テクスト体系 名古屋大学出版会 ISBN 978 4815807238 内田 啓一 2006 文観房弘真と美術 法藏館 ISBN 978 4831876393 黒田 日出男 1993 王の身体 王の肖像 イメージ リーディング叢書 平凡社 ISBN 978 4582284706 遠山 元浩 2014 清浄光寺蔵 後醍醐天皇像 関連史料の一考察 駒沢女子大学研究紀要 in Japanese 出版社不明 21 21 27 44 doi 10 18998 00001184 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Miǎn guan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mianguan amp oldid 1132921309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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