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Ottoman clothing

Ottoman clothing or Ottoman fashion is the style and design of clothing worn during the Ottoman Empire.

An Ottoman official

Ottoman period edit

 
Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent adorned in a richly embroidered kaftan
 
A stylish young woman of the mid-17th century. She wears şalvar (trousers), a long, sheer gömlek (chemise), and an ankle-length purple entari (outer robe) with the ends tucked up. The fur lining of her yelek (jacket or vest) marks her as wealthy and high-ranking.
 
Abdülmecid I

While those of the palace and court dressed lavishly, common people were only concerned with covering themselves. Starting in the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent, administrators enacted sumptuary laws about the clothing of Muslims, Christians, Jewish communities, clergy, tradesmen, and state and military officials, particularly strictly enforced during the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent.

In this period men wore outer clothing like the 'mintan' (a vest or short jacket), 'zıbın', 'şalvar' (trousers), 'kuşak' (sash), 'potur', entari or kaftan (long robe), 'kalpak', 'sarık' on the head, and 'çarık', çizme (boots), 'çedik', or 'Yemeni' on the feet. The administrators and the wealthy wore caftans with fur lining and embroidery, whereas the middle class wore 'cübbe' (mid-length robe) or 'hırka' (a short robe or tunic). The poor wore collarless 'cepken' or 'yelek' (vest).

Women's everyday wear was şalvar (trousers), a gömlek(chemise) that came down to mid-calf or ankle, a short, fitted jacket called a zıbın, and a sash or belt tied at or just below the waist. For formal occasions, such as visiting friends, the woman added an entari or kaftan, a long robe that was cut like the zıbın apart from the length. Both zıbın and kaftan were buttoned to the waist, leaving the skirts open in front. Both garments also had buttons all the way to the throat but were often buttoned only to the underside of the bust, leaving the garments to gape open over the bust. All of these clothes could be brightly colored and patterned. However, when a woman left the house, she covered her clothes with a ferace, a dark, modestly cut robe that buttoned all the way to the throat. She also covered her hair and face with a pair of veils.

Headgear was the most potent indicator of male social status. While commoners wore "külahs" covered with 'abani' or 'Yemeni', higher-ranking men wore a wide variety of turbans.

'Political crises of the 17th century were reflected in chaos in clothes. The excessively luxurious compulsion for consumption and showing off in the Tulip Era lasted until the 19th century. The modernization attempts of Mahmud II in the 1830s first had their effects in the state sector. While the 'sarık' was replaced by the 'fez', people employed at the Sublime Porte began to wear trousers, 'setre' and 'potin'.

Headwear edit

Ottoman headdresses indicated the status and occupation of the wearer. Royal turbans could be decorated with feathers in an ornamental aigrette. Starting from the 19th century, sultans started wearing fezzes instead of turbans. The daughters of sultans would receive luxurious jewelry when marrying, including diadems or veils with jewels embedded in them. Imperial and noble ladies would also cover their heads with small handkerchiefs and their faces with Brussels net veils.[1]

There are not many records of women's clothing at the time, but artwork can provide some understanding. Headdresses were typically tall, pointed hats with a veil attached to them, which served to cover their faces during outings. In depictions of sultanas, their clothing is mostly fabricated with few references to what Ottoman women actually wore. A portrait of Roxelana depicts her wearing a pillbox-shaped headdress with decorative jewels on the border. While her headdress illustrates popular styles in Ottoman women's headwear at the time, her clothing remains very similar to European-style clothing. This was a popular way to depict women, specifically sultanas.[2]

Many factors contributed to changes in Ottoman women's garments, including the cost of materials and firmans, or royal declarations. At the beginning of the 18th century, upper-class women began wearing yashmaks, or veils that covered their faces when going out. Over time, the yashmaks became more transparent and wider, with silver embroidery. As more changes were made to women's clothing, yashmaks and feraces were seen less as garments to cover the body, and mor as decorative and ornamental styles.

In the 19th century, there were more extreme changes in women's clothing. Yemenis, or headscarves, were so thin that their hair was almost all visible. Other traditional garments combined Turkish and European fashions.

Around World War I, Turkish women began wearing headscarves tied below the chin instead of the carsaf, a robe-like dress that covered the whole body and head except for the eyes.[3]

Tanzimat period edit

During the 'Tanzimat' and 'Meşrutiyet' period in the 19th century, common people still wearing traditional clothing presented a great contrast with to administrators and the wealthy wearing 'redingot', jacket, waistcoat, boyunbağı (tie), 'mintan', sharp-pointed and high-heeled shoes. Women's clothes of the Ottoman period in the 'mansions' and Palace courts included 'Entari', 'kuşak', 'şalvar', 'başörtü', and the 'ferace' of the 19th century without much change.

In the 16th century, women wore two-layer long 'entari' and 'tül', velvet shawls, on their heads. Their outdoor clothing consisted of 'ferace' and 'yeldirme'. The simplification in the 17th century was apparent in an inner 'entari' worn under a short-sleeved, caftan-shaped outfit and a matching belt.

Women's wear becoming more showy and extravagant accompanied adorned hair buns and tailoring. Tailoring in its real sense began in this period. The sense of women's wear primarily began in large residential centers such as Istanbul and İzmir in the 19th century and women gradually began to participate in social life, along with the Westernization movement. Pera became the center of fashion and Paris fashions were followed by tailors of Greek and Armenian origin. In the period of Abdul Hamid II, the 'ferace' (a concealing outer robe shaped like a modestly cut version of the indoor dress) was replaced by 'çarşaf' of different styles. However, the rural sector continued to wear traditional clothing.

Ottoman influence on Western female dress edit

 
Madame de Pompadour portrayed as a Turkish lady in 1747 by Charles André van Loo
 
Man In Oriental Costume ("The Noble Slav"), oil on canvas, by Rembrandt, 1632. A significant example of European emulation of Ottoman dress for the purpose of portraying a dignified, elite appearance.

Interactions between Ottomans and Britons occurred throughout history, but in the 18th century, European visitors and residents in the Ottoman Empire markedly increased, and exploded in the 19th century.[4] As such, fashion is one method to gauge the increased interactions. Historically, Europeans clothing was more delineated between male and female dress. Hose and trousers were reserved for men, and skirts were for women.[5] Conversely, in the Ottoman Empire, male and female dress was more similar. A common item worn by both was the şalvar, a voluminous undergarment in white fabric shaped like what is today called "harem pants".[6] To British women traveling in the Ottoman Empire, the şalvar quickly became a symbol of freedom because they observed that Ottoman women had more rights than British women. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689–1762), wife of the British ambassador to Constantinople, noted in her Turkish Embassy Letters that Ottoman women "possessed legal property rights and protections that far surpassed the rights of Western women".[7] These female travelers often gained an intimate view of Ottoman culture, since as women, they had easier access to the Muslim elite harems than did men.[8] Şalvar successfully spread into Europe at the end of the 19th century as various female suffragists and feminists used şalvar as a symbol of emancipation. Other British women of distinction, such as Lady Janey Archibald Campbell (1845–1923), and Lady Ottoline (Violet Anne) Morrell (1873–1938) wore şalvar "in an attempt to symbolize their refusal of traditional British standards and sexual differences".[9] Şalvar also spread beyond Europe when Amelia Jenks Bloomer modified these "Turkish trousers" to create American "bloomers".[10]

Another area where the Ottomans influenced female Western dress was in layering. Initially, layering had a practical use for the ancestors of the Ottoman Empire, who were pastoral nomads and horse riders, and needed to wear layers to adapt to changing temperatures.[11] As the Ottoman Empire came into being, the layering of garments would distinguish one's gender, class, or rank within particular communities, while also displaying many sumptuous fabrics, thus signaling one's wealth and status. Layering also had spiritual significance. In Islamic art, layering different patterns represents a spiritual metaphor of the divine order that seems to be incomprehensible, but is actually planned and meaningful.[11]

In Europe, in the 16th century, skirts began to have a layered appearance. Previous to the 16th century, skirts were slit only at the bottom, but now, the slit bisected the front of the skirt to reveal a contrasting layer underneath. Often, the underlayer would coordinate with a layered sleeve.[12] Hanging sleeves were also a European concept derived from the Ottomans, although they arrived in Europe much earlier than layered skirts. In the 12th century, religious and scholarly peoples would wear coats that had hanging sleeves, similar to Turkish-style outer kaftans. These hanging sleeves meant one could see the second layer of fabric underneath the outer layer.[12] Although hanging sleeves had been present in Europe since the 12th century, they did not escape Lady Mary Montague's fascination in the 18th century. In a letter dated 10 March 1717, she wrote to the Countess of Marabout Hafiz (Hafsa) Sultan, a woman who was a favorite of the deposed Sultan Mustafa: "But her dress was something so surprisingly rich, that I cannot forbear describing it to you. She wore a vest called donalmá, which differs from a caftan by long sleeves and folding over the bottom. It was of purple cloth, straight to her shape, and thick-set on each side, down to her feet, and round the sleeves, with pearls of the best water, of the same size as their buttons commonly are."[13]

Republican period edit

The common clothing styles prevailing in the mid 19th century imposed by religious reasons entered a transformation phase in the Republican period. In this period the 'şapka' and the following 'kılık kıyafet' reform being realized with the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in Kastamonu in 1925 had a full impact in Istanbul. Women's 'çarşaf' and 'peçe' were replaced by a coat, scarf, and shawl. Men began to wear hats, jackets, shirts, waistcoats, ties, trousers and shoes. With the industrialization process of the 1960s, women entered the work-life and tailors were substituted by readymade clothes industry. The contemporary fashion concept, as it is in the whole world, is apparent in both social and economic dimensions in Turkey as well.

Modern use edit

Modern Turkish designers such as Rıfat Özbek, Cemil İpekçi, Vural Gökçaylı, Yıldırım Mayruk, Sadık Kızılağaç, Hakan Elyaban, and Bahar Korçan draw inspiration from historical Ottoman designs, and Ottoman or Ottoman-inspired patterns are important to the Turkish textile industry.

Gallery edit

Religious garb (1878)

Everyday people (1878)

Folk costumes in 1873 edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ İrepoğlu, Gül (2012). Imperial Ottoman jewellery: reading history through jewellery. Feyza Howell. İstanbul. ISBN 978-605-5488-14-7. OCLC 815521945.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ Madar, Heather (2011). "Before the Odalisque: Renaissance Representations of Elite Ottoman Women". Early Modern Women. 6: 1–41. doi:10.1086/EMW23617325. ISSN 1933-0065. JSTOR 23617325. S2CID 164805076.
  3. ^ Koç, Fatma; Koca, Emine (January 2007). "The Westernization Process in Ottoman Women's Garments: 18th Century~20th Century". Asian Journal of Women's Studies. 13 (4): 57–84. doi:10.1080/12259276.2007.11666035. ISSN 1225-9276. S2CID 155237364.
  4. ^ Charlotte Jirousek. Ottoman Costumes: From Textile to Identity. S Faroqhi and C. Neumann, ed. Istanbul: Eren Publishing, 2005.
  5. ^ Inal, Onur. "Women's Fashions in Transition: Ottoman Borderlands and the Anglo-Ottoman Exchange of Costumes." Journal of World History 22.2 (2011): 243–72. Web. p. 234
  6. ^ Inal, p. 252
  7. ^ Jirousek, p. 8
  8. ^ Inal, p. 264
  9. ^ Inal, p. 258
  10. ^ Jirousek, p. 9
  11. ^ a b Jirousek, p. 2
  12. ^ a b Jirousek, p. 12
  13. ^ Inal, p. 253

References edit

  • Feyzi, Muharrem. Eski Türk Kıyafetleri ve Güzel Giyim Tarzları.
  • Koçu, Reşat Ekrem (1967). Türk Giyim Kuşam ve Süslenme Sözlüğü. Ankara: Sümerbank.
  • .Küçükerman, Önder (1966). . Türk Giyim Sanayinin Tarihi Kaynakları. İstanbul: GSD Dış Ticaret AŞ.
  • Sevin, Nurettin (1990). Onüç Asırlık Türk Kıyafet Tarihine Bir Bakış. Ankara: T.C. Kültür Bakanlığı.
  • .Tuğlac, Pars (1985). Osmanlı Saray Kadınları / The Ottoman Palace Women. Istanbul: Cem Yayınevi.

External links edit

  • NYPL Digital Gallery — Album of Turkish Costume Paintings

ottoman, clothing, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, july, 2011, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, o. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ottoman clothing or Ottoman fashion is the style and design of clothing worn during the Ottoman Empire An Ottoman official Contents 1 Ottoman period 1 1 Headwear 1 2 Tanzimat period 2 Ottoman influence on Western female dress 3 Republican period 4 Modern use 5 Gallery 5 1 Folk costumes in 1873 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksOttoman period edit nbsp Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent adorned in a richly embroidered kaftan nbsp A stylish young woman of the mid 17th century She wears salvar trousers a long sheer gomlek chemise and an ankle length purple entari outer robe with the ends tucked up The fur lining of her yelek jacket or vest marks her as wealthy and high ranking nbsp Abdulmecid IWhile those of the palace and court dressed lavishly common people were only concerned with covering themselves Starting in the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent administrators enacted sumptuary laws about the clothing of Muslims Christians Jewish communities clergy tradesmen and state and military officials particularly strictly enforced during the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent In this period men wore outer clothing like the mintan a vest or short jacket zibin salvar trousers kusak sash potur entari or kaftan long robe kalpak sarik on the head and carik cizme boots cedik or Yemeni on the feet The administrators and the wealthy wore caftans with fur lining and embroidery whereas the middle class wore cubbe mid length robe or hirka a short robe or tunic The poor wore collarless cepken or yelek vest Women s everyday wear was salvar trousers a gomlek chemise that came down to mid calf or ankle a short fitted jacket called a zibin and a sash or belt tied at or just below the waist For formal occasions such as visiting friends the woman added an entari or kaftan a long robe that was cut like the zibin apart from the length Both zibin and kaftan were buttoned to the waist leaving the skirts open in front Both garments also had buttons all the way to the throat but were often buttoned only to the underside of the bust leaving the garments to gape open over the bust All of these clothes could be brightly colored and patterned However when a woman left the house she covered her clothes with a ferace a dark modestly cut robe that buttoned all the way to the throat She also covered her hair and face with a pair of veils Headgear was the most potent indicator of male social status While commoners wore kulahs covered with abani or Yemeni higher ranking men wore a wide variety of turbans Political crises of the 17th century were reflected in chaos in clothes The excessively luxurious compulsion for consumption and showing off in the Tulip Era lasted until the 19th century The modernization attempts of Mahmud II in the 1830s first had their effects in the state sector While the sarik was replaced by the fez people employed at the Sublime Porte began to wear trousers setre and potin Headwear edit Ottoman headdresses indicated the status and occupation of the wearer Royal turbans could be decorated with feathers in an ornamental aigrette Starting from the 19th century sultans started wearing fezzes instead of turbans The daughters of sultans would receive luxurious jewelry when marrying including diadems or veils with jewels embedded in them Imperial and noble ladies would also cover their heads with small handkerchiefs and their faces with Brussels net veils 1 There are not many records of women s clothing at the time but artwork can provide some understanding Headdresses were typically tall pointed hats with a veil attached to them which served to cover their faces during outings In depictions of sultanas their clothing is mostly fabricated with few references to what Ottoman women actually wore A portrait of Roxelana depicts her wearing a pillbox shaped headdress with decorative jewels on the border While her headdress illustrates popular styles in Ottoman women s headwear at the time her clothing remains very similar to European style clothing This was a popular way to depict women specifically sultanas 2 Many factors contributed to changes in Ottoman women s garments including the cost of materials and firmans or royal declarations At the beginning of the 18th century upper class women began wearing yashmaks or veils that covered their faces when going out Over time the yashmaks became more transparent and wider with silver embroidery As more changes were made to women s clothing yashmaks and feraces were seen less as garments to cover the body and mor as decorative and ornamental styles In the 19th century there were more extreme changes in women s clothing Yemenis or headscarves were so thin that their hair was almost all visible Other traditional garments combined Turkish and European fashions Around World War I Turkish women began wearing headscarves tied below the chin instead of the carsaf a robe like dress that covered the whole body and head except for the eyes 3 Tanzimat period edit Main article Tanzimat During the Tanzimat and Mesrutiyet period in the 19th century common people still wearing traditional clothing presented a great contrast with to administrators and the wealthy wearing redingot jacket waistcoat boyunbagi tie mintan sharp pointed and high heeled shoes Women s clothes of the Ottoman period in the mansions and Palace courts included Entari kusak salvar basortu and the ferace of the 19th century without much change In the 16th century women wore two layer long entari and tul velvet shawls on their heads Their outdoor clothing consisted of ferace and yeldirme The simplification in the 17th century was apparent in an inner entari worn under a short sleeved caftan shaped outfit and a matching belt Women s wear becoming more showy and extravagant accompanied adorned hair buns and tailoring Tailoring in its real sense began in this period The sense of women s wear primarily began in large residential centers such as Istanbul and Izmir in the 19th century and women gradually began to participate in social life along with the Westernization movement Pera became the center of fashion and Paris fashions were followed by tailors of Greek and Armenian origin In the period of Abdul Hamid II the ferace a concealing outer robe shaped like a modestly cut version of the indoor dress was replaced by carsaf of different styles However the rural sector continued to wear traditional clothing nbsp Ambassador Ahmed Fethi Pasha in Western clothing 1835 nbsp Diplomat Ahmed Muhtar Bey in Western clothing 1844 nbsp Fatma Aliye Topuz was one of the first women s rights activists appearing in Western clothing throughout her public life nbsp Western dress was adopted by administrators and the wealthy during the Tanzimat period The person being depicted is Salih Zeki Bey Ottoman influence on Western female dress editFurther information Turquerie and Orientalism in early modern France nbsp Madame de Pompadour portrayed as a Turkish lady in 1747 by Charles Andre van Loo nbsp Man In Oriental Costume The Noble Slav oil on canvas by Rembrandt 1632 A significant example of European emulation of Ottoman dress for the purpose of portraying a dignified elite appearance Interactions between Ottomans and Britons occurred throughout history but in the 18th century European visitors and residents in the Ottoman Empire markedly increased and exploded in the 19th century 4 As such fashion is one method to gauge the increased interactions Historically Europeans clothing was more delineated between male and female dress Hose and trousers were reserved for men and skirts were for women 5 Conversely in the Ottoman Empire male and female dress was more similar A common item worn by both was the salvar a voluminous undergarment in white fabric shaped like what is today called harem pants 6 To British women traveling in the Ottoman Empire the salvar quickly became a symbol of freedom because they observed that Ottoman women had more rights than British women Lady Mary Wortley Montagu 1689 1762 wife of the British ambassador to Constantinople noted in her Turkish Embassy Letters that Ottoman women possessed legal property rights and protections that far surpassed the rights of Western women 7 These female travelers often gained an intimate view of Ottoman culture since as women they had easier access to the Muslim elite harems than did men 8 Salvar successfully spread into Europe at the end of the 19th century as various female suffragists and feminists used salvar as a symbol of emancipation Other British women of distinction such as Lady Janey Archibald Campbell 1845 1923 and Lady Ottoline Violet Anne Morrell 1873 1938 wore salvar in an attempt to symbolize their refusal of traditional British standards and sexual differences 9 Salvar also spread beyond Europe when Amelia Jenks Bloomer modified these Turkish trousers to create American bloomers 10 Another area where the Ottomans influenced female Western dress was in layering Initially layering had a practical use for the ancestors of the Ottoman Empire who were pastoral nomads and horse riders and needed to wear layers to adapt to changing temperatures 11 As the Ottoman Empire came into being the layering of garments would distinguish one s gender class or rank within particular communities while also displaying many sumptuous fabrics thus signaling one s wealth and status Layering also had spiritual significance In Islamic art layering different patterns represents a spiritual metaphor of the divine order that seems to be incomprehensible but is actually planned and meaningful 11 In Europe in the 16th century skirts began to have a layered appearance Previous to the 16th century skirts were slit only at the bottom but now the slit bisected the front of the skirt to reveal a contrasting layer underneath Often the underlayer would coordinate with a layered sleeve 12 Hanging sleeves were also a European concept derived from the Ottomans although they arrived in Europe much earlier than layered skirts In the 12th century religious and scholarly peoples would wear coats that had hanging sleeves similar to Turkish style outer kaftans These hanging sleeves meant one could see the second layer of fabric underneath the outer layer 12 Although hanging sleeves had been present in Europe since the 12th century they did not escape Lady Mary Montague s fascination in the 18th century In a letter dated 10 March 1717 she wrote to the Countess of Marabout Hafiz Hafsa Sultan a woman who was a favorite of the deposed Sultan Mustafa But her dress was something so surprisingly rich that I cannot forbear describing it to you She wore a vest called donalma which differs from a caftan by long sleeves and folding over the bottom It was of purple cloth straight to her shape and thick set on each side down to her feet and round the sleeves with pearls of the best water of the same size as their buttons commonly are 13 Republican period editThe common clothing styles prevailing in the mid 19th century imposed by religious reasons entered a transformation phase in the Republican period In this period the sapka and the following kilik kiyafet reform being realized with the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in Kastamonu in 1925 had a full impact in Istanbul Women s carsaf and pece were replaced by a coat scarf and shawl Men began to wear hats jackets shirts waistcoats ties trousers and shoes With the industrialization process of the 1960s women entered the work life and tailors were substituted by readymade clothes industry The contemporary fashion concept as it is in the whole world is apparent in both social and economic dimensions in Turkey as well Modern use editModern Turkish designers such as Rifat Ozbek Cemil Ipekci Vural Gokcayli Yildirim Mayruk Sadik Kizilagac Hakan Elyaban and Bahar Korcan draw inspiration from historical Ottoman designs and Ottoman or Ottoman inspired patterns are important to the Turkish textile industry Gallery editReligious garb 1878 nbsp Jewish rabbi nbsp Armenian Orthodox patriarch nbsp Greek Orthodox priest nbsp Turkish Muslim alim nbsp Mendicant dervish nbsp Active dervishEveryday people 1878 nbsp Turkish peasant nbsp Turkish Zeybek nbsp Turkish man nbsp Turkish woman at home nbsp Veiled Turkish woman nbsp Porter nbsp Turkish Boy nbsp Turkish boy nbsp Turkish girl nbsp Gypsy girl nbsp Men aboard a ferry nbsp Men aboard a ferry nbsp Odalisque nbsp Woman outdoorsFolk costumes in 1873 edit Vilayet of Constantinople nbsp 1 Burgher from Constantinople2 Aiwas servant nbsp 1 Caikji boatman 2 Sakka water carrier 3 Hammal porter nbsp 1 Mevlevi Dervish2 Bektashi Dervish3 Mullah nbsp 1 and 2 Turkish ladies from Constantinople3 Turkish schoolboy nbsp 1 Armenian bride2 Jewish woman from Constantinople3 Greek girlVilayet of Adrianople nbsp 1 Muslim inhabitant of Edirne2 Muslim horseman from Edirne3 Christian artisan from Edirne nbsp 1 Macedonian peasant from Monastir2 Macedonian peasant woman Monastir3 Bulgarian woman from Shkoder nbsp 1 Muslim horseman from Plovdiv2 Bulgarian man from Koyountepe3 Bulgarian man from Ah i Tchelebi nbsp 1 Bulgarian woman from Ahi Tchelebi2 Greek woman from Haskovo3 Peasant woman from BaidjasVilayet of the Danube nbsp 1 Bulgarian man from Sofia2 Bulgarian woman from Sofia nbsp 1 Bulgarian woman from Ruse2 Christian Bulgarian from Vidin3 Muslim Bulgarian from VidinVilayet of Prizren Vilayet of Scutari nbsp 1 Muslim woman from Prizren2 Farmers from around Prizren3 Christian peasant woman from Matefse nbsp 1 Hodja from Shkoder2 Christian priest from Shkoder nbsp 1 Muslim lady from Shkoder2 Christian lady from Shkoder3 Peasant woman from Malissor nbsp 1 Muslim from Shkoder2 Muslim lady from Shkoder nbsp 1 Christian from Shkoder2 Christian lady from Shkoder nbsp 1 Shepherd and peasant woman from MalissorVilayet of Janina Vilayet of Salonica Vilayet of Bosnia nbsp 1 Wealthy Arnaut from Ioannina2 Wealthy Arnaut lady from Ioannina3 Arnaut child of a wealthy family nbsp 1 Arnaut from Ioannina middle class 2 Arnaut from Ioannina lower class nbsp 1 Wallachian Aromanian Woman from Ioannina2 Christian woman from Preveza3 Peasant woman from around Trikala nbsp 1 Hodja from Saloniki2 Hakham Bashi of Saloniki3 Burgher from Monastir nbsp 1 Muslim lady from Saloniki2 Jewish lady from Saloniki3 Macedonian woman from Prilep nbsp 1 Inhabitant of Mostar2 Burgher from Sarajevo3 Lady from SarajevoVilayet of Crete nbsp 1 Christian burgher from Chania2 Christian horseman from Chania3 Muslim lady from Chania nbsp 1 Female Christian villager from Chania2 Christian villager from Chania3 Inhabitant of SfakiaVilayet of the Archipelago nbsp 1 Muslim Artisan man and woman from Canakkale nbsp 1 Yorouk nomad from Biga2 Christian inhabitant of Chios3 Christian from Lemnos nbsp 1 Yorouk woman from Biga2 Christian woman from Chios3 Christian woman from Lemnos nbsp 1 Muslim from Rhodes2 Muslim lady from Rhodes nbsp 1 Jew from Rhodes2 Jewish woman from Rhodes nbsp 1 Christian inhabitant of Lesbos2 Christian woman from Lesbos3 Christian woman from Symi nbsp 1 Christian inhabitant of Famagusta2 Christian woman from Famagusta3 Greek religious man of the Tchiko Monastery near LefkaVilayet of Hudavendigar nbsp 1 Turkmen from around Bursa nbsp 1 Peasant man and woman from around Bursa wearing wedding clothing 2 Seis horse groom nbsp 1 Jew and Jewish woman from BursaVilayet of Aydin nbsp 1 Zeibek2 Artisan from Aydin nbsp 1 Christian merchant from Aydin2 Haham from Izmir3 Burgher from Manisa nbsp 1 Muslim lady from Manisa2 Muslim lady from IzmirVilayet of Konia nbsp 1 Christian from Konya2 Muslim horseman from Konya3 Inhabitant of Elmali nbsp 1 Armenian Priest from Konya2 Mullah from Konya3 Greek Priest from Konya nbsp 1 Burgher from Konya2 Greek woman from Burdur3 Muslim woman from Burdur nbsp 1 Armenian woman from Burdur2 Turkmen woman from Karie de Outmouk3 Kurdish woman from SarikayaVilayet of Ankara nbsp 1 Muslim Artisan from Ankara2 Christian Artisan from Ankara3 Kurd from around Yozgat nbsp 1 Bashi bazouk from Ankara2 Muslim peasant from around Ankara3 Muslim peasant woman from around Ankara nbsp 1 Kurdish woman from around Yozgat2 Female Christian artisan from Ankara3 Muslim female artisan from AnkaraVilayet of Kastamonu nbsp 1 Turkish worker from Kastamonu2 Peasant from Safranbolu3 Kurd from ViransehirVilayet of Sivas nbsp 1 Turkish woman from Osmancik2 Muslim artisan from Amasya3 Christian lady from Tokat nbsp 1 Muslim woman from Sivas2 Armenian woman from Sivas3 Kurdish woman from around SivasVilayet of Trebizond nbsp 1 Muslim from Trabzon2 Muslim peasant woman from around Trabzon3 Laz man nbsp 1 Muslim lady from Trabzon indoor dress 2 Muslim lady from Trabzon outdoor dress Vilayet of Erzerum nbsp 1 Worker from around Erzurum2 Muslim woman from Van3 Armenian woman from Van nbsp 1 Armenian priest from Akhtamar2 Kurdish horseman from Hakkari3 Kurdish piade foot soldier from HakkariVilayet of Diyarbekir nbsp 1 Muslim from Diyarbakir2 Christian from Diyarbakir3 Kurd from Palu nbsp 1 Muslim lady from Diyarbakir 2 Christian lady from Diyarbakir3 Kurdish woman from Palu nbsp 1 Shepherd from around Diyarbakir2 A Kurd from Cizre3 Kurd from around Mardin nbsp 1 Muslim lady from Sa nt indoor clothing 2 Muslim lady from Sa nt outdoor clothing 3 Kurdish woman from ElazigVilayet of Adana Vilayet of Aleppo nbsp 1 Bedouin from the vilayet of Aleppo2 Bedouin woman from the vilayet of Aleppo3 Jewish lady from Aleppo nbsp 1 Muslim from around Adana2 Muslim woman from around Tarsus3 Inhabitant of HadjinVilayet of Syria nbsp 1 Christian inhabitant of Beirut summer dress 2 Muslim lady from Beirut3 Christian lady from Beirut winter dress nbsp 1 Muslim from Lebanon2 Muslim woman from Lebanon nbsp 1 Christian mountain dweller from Zahle Lebanon 2 Christian mountain dweller from Zgharta Lebanon 3 Druze from Lebanon nbsp 1 Christian woman from Zahle Lebanon 2 Christian woman from Zgharta Lebanon 3 Druze woman from Lebanon nbsp 1 Bedouin from Mount Lebanon 2 Bedouin woman from Lebanon nbsp 1 Fellah from around Damascus2 Druze from around Damascus3 Arab nomad woman from the Ourban tribe nbsp 1 Fellah woman from around Damascus2 Druze woman from around Damascus3 Lady from Damascus nbsp 1 Christian artisan from Belka2 Artisan woman from Belka3 Peasant Muslim woman from around Belka nbsp 1 Shopkeeper from Belka2 Fellah from around Belka3 Muslim artisan from Belka nbsp 1 Jew from Jerusalem2 Jewish woman from Jerusalem nbsp 1 Arab lady from Jerusalem2 Fellah from around Jerusalem3 Fellah woman from around JerusalemVilayets of Baghdad Hejaz Yemen Tripolitania nbsp 1 Arab man of the Shammar tribe2 Arab man from Zubaid tribe 3 Muslim lady from Baghdad nbsp 1 A alim from Mecca2 Inhabitant from Djeaddele environs of Mecca 3 Baveri of the guard of the Sharif of Mecca nbsp 1 Kabyle of the Harb tribe environs of Medina 2 Kabyle woman of the Harb tribe environs of Medina 3 Muslim woman from Djeaddele environs of Mecca nbsp 1 A alim from Al Hudaydah2 Burgher from Al Hudaydah3 Muslim lady from Sana a nbsp 1 Shopkeeper from Mocha2 Muslim lady from Mecca3 Moorish girl from TripoliSee also editKaftan Calpack Fez Jelick Turkish salvar Harem pants Bloomers Turban Yashmak Dolman Carsaf Delia clothing Kontusz Pas kontuszowy Zupan Towel Timeline of the Turks 500 1300 Notes edit Irepoglu Gul 2012 Imperial Ottoman jewellery reading history through jewellery Feyza Howell Istanbul ISBN 978 605 5488 14 7 OCLC 815521945 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Madar Heather 2011 Before the Odalisque Renaissance Representations of Elite Ottoman Women Early Modern Women 6 1 41 doi 10 1086 EMW23617325 ISSN 1933 0065 JSTOR 23617325 S2CID 164805076 Koc Fatma Koca Emine January 2007 The Westernization Process in Ottoman Women s Garments 18th Century 20th Century Asian Journal of Women s Studies 13 4 57 84 doi 10 1080 12259276 2007 11666035 ISSN 1225 9276 S2CID 155237364 Charlotte Jirousek Ottoman Costumes From Textile to Identity S Faroqhi and C Neumann ed Istanbul Eren Publishing 2005 Inal Onur Women s Fashions in Transition Ottoman Borderlands and the Anglo Ottoman Exchange of Costumes Journal of World History 22 2 2011 243 72 Web p 234 Inal p 252 Jirousek p 8 Inal p 264 Inal p 258 Jirousek p 9 a b Jirousek p 2 a b Jirousek p 12 Inal p 253References editFeyzi Muharrem Eski Turk Kiyafetleri ve Guzel Giyim Tarzlari Kocu Resat Ekrem 1967 Turk Giyim Kusam ve Suslenme Sozlugu Ankara Sumerbank Kucukerman Onder 1966 Turk Giyim Sanayinin Tarihi Kaynaklari Istanbul GSD Dis Ticaret AS Sevin Nurettin 1990 Onuc Asirlik Turk Kiyafet Tarihine Bir Bakis Ankara T C Kultur Bakanligi Tuglac Pars 1985 Osmanli Saray Kadinlari The Ottoman Palace Women Istanbul Cem Yayinevi External links editNYPL Digital Gallery Album of Turkish Costume Paintings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ottoman clothing amp oldid 1217529578, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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