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Thick knitted cloth, starch paper, silk, leather, fleece
Measurements diameter 18.8 cm - 19.3 cm.
Mongolia
14th Century
Nobleman’s hat
Received in the Mongolian Statehood History Museum's collection fund from Ch. Amartuvshin, Museum Director of the Archeology Institute of the Academy of Science based on the No.14 report.
Owner
Mongolian Statehood History Museum
Museum
Mongolian Statehood History Museum
The hat is a priceless, unique object and the only nobleman's hat that has been found fully intact.
History of the Object
The hat was found in a nobleman’s tomb by a team of Mongolian archaeological researchers. Illustrations of a Khan nobleman's hat were also found on Persian miniatures from the 13th and 14th Century.
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/textiles...
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/T-0934.h...
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
!
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/T-0892.h...
Mongol Nobleman's Hat
Antique Mongol Nobleman's hat woven with silk and gold in lampas weave with design of small lobed palmettes each with either a floral or a lynx cat center to the palmette. Long deep purple silk ribbons to each side of the hat.
68 x 500 cm, 1250
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/T-0893.h...
Mongol Nobleman's Hat
Antique Mongol Nobleman's hat woven in silk and gold lampas weave with design of small phoenixes in flight amongst flowers - fragmented
70 x 33 cm, 1250
m.pinterest.com/argentphoenix/historical-fashio...
elogedelart.canalblog.com/tag/Central%20Asia
www.genghiskhanexhibits.com/genius/artifacts.ht...
Collection The Institute of Archaeology of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences
Three mummies, two adults and one child, were found by local herdsmen in Bayankhongar aimag (province), Mongolia. The location was excavated in 2005, and the human remains were brought to the Smithsonian Institution where they were studied by Dr. Bruno Frohlich and his forensic research team. These remains of a female were found in a plain wooden coffin. She was wearing three layers of deels, or cloaks, two of fine silk and the third of leather. The quantity of her clothing suggests that she died in winter. Their quality, and the presence of the wood frame of a tall hat favored by nobelwomen, suggests that she was an important figure in Mongol society.
www.artmap.tv/news_detail.aspx?id=1094
The exhibition shows unusually well-preserved, up to 1,300-year-old objects that have been discovered in recent years in the so-called “rock graves” in western Mongolia. The between 2005 and 2010 excavated and rescued rock grave inventories were - thanks to the great trust of the Institute of Archaeology from the Mongolian Academy of Sciences - mainly analyzed and restored in the workshop of the LVR-LandesMuseum in Bonn.
Thanks to the dry and cold climates, ephemeral materials such as wood, textiles, feathers, animal skins and metals have obtained excellent. Reflexbows, quivers, arrows with fletching and riding equipment, but also clothes - including the oldest surviving Felt-Deel - and the oldest stringed instrument in Mongolia, a harp with a horse's head, show the life of the Eurasian steppe warriors in an unknown way.
kitabhona.org.ua/attachments/132_Oka-Kultur_vza...
Статья, перевод
www.eaa2011.no/absractsearch.cfm?pMode=Abstract...
The Clothing of the Great Mongolian Empire: Whom does it belong to?
Author: Oka, Ildiko Hajnalka
ELTE University
Japan
Abstract text: During the last two decades a large quantity of Yuan era costumes has been discovered in the Autonomous Region of Inner Mongolia and in Mongolia. The textile finds from Inner Mongolia have been studied by Zhao Feng and Anne Wardwell and the costumes from Bukhiin Khoshoo and Nartyn Khad (Mongolia) by U.Erdenbat and the author of this presentation. Now we are able to analyze - even recreate – the costumes of the Great Mongolian Empire because according the pictorial representations of the costumes, they were very similar in every part of the Empire. In the imperial workshops of the Yuan the forcibly resettled textile workers from Central and Western Asia worked together with the Chinese artisans. This multiethnic workforce worked for multiethnic elite: their products were distributed by the imperial court to the members of the military and the administration, or presented to foreign dignitaries. These nasij textiles and costumes were highly valued not only because they were woven of golden threads and had an intricate and bold pattern but because they symbolized the power and wealth of the greatest empire of the era. But exactly whom do they belong? The Mongolian researchers (and public) consider these costumes as essentially Mongolian costumes. On the other hand, the Chinese scientists' opinion is that the Yuan dynasty thought Mongolian in origin, was a ruling dynasty of China ergo these costumes belong to the China’s costume history. Other countries, which territory belonged to the Great Mongol Empire, and which culture and clothing were strongly influenced by it, have a similar opinion. The clothing of the Mongol Empire was the part of an imperial culture: the Yuan’s was even regulated by a Dress Code; every official had to dress accordingly to his (or her) status. Not surprisingly, it had a long-lasting impact on the clothing of every people under its rule (and even outside of it). This presentation discusses the meaning and symbolism of the costumes in their own time and society.
Thick knitted cloth, starch paper, silk, leather, fleece
Measurements diameter 18.8 cm - 19.3 cm.
Mongolia
14th Century
Nobleman’s hat
Received in the Mongolian Statehood History Museum's collection fund from Ch. Amartuvshin, Museum Director of the Archeology Institute of the Academy of Science based on the No.14 report.
Owner
Mongolian Statehood History Museum
Museum
Mongolian Statehood History Museum
The hat is a priceless, unique object and the only nobleman's hat that has been found fully intact.
History of the Object
The hat was found in a nobleman’s tomb by a team of Mongolian archaeological researchers. Illustrations of a Khan nobleman's hat were also found on Persian miniatures from the 13th and 14th Century.
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/textiles...
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/T-0934.h...
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
!
masterpieces.asemus.museum/masterpieces.aspx?o=...
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/T-0892.h...
Mongol Nobleman's Hat
Antique Mongol Nobleman's hat woven with silk and gold in lampas weave with design of small lobed palmettes each with either a floral or a lynx cat center to the palmette. Long deep purple silk ribbons to each side of the hat.
68 x 500 cm, 1250
www.plumblossoms.com/antiques/Textiles/T-0893.h...
Mongol Nobleman's Hat
Antique Mongol Nobleman's hat woven in silk and gold lampas weave with design of small phoenixes in flight amongst flowers - fragmented
70 x 33 cm, 1250
m.pinterest.com/argentphoenix/historical-fashio...
elogedelart.canalblog.com/tag/Central%20Asia
www.genghiskhanexhibits.com/genius/artifacts.ht...
Collection The Institute of Archaeology of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences
Three mummies, two adults and one child, were found by local herdsmen in Bayankhongar aimag (province), Mongolia. The location was excavated in 2005, and the human remains were brought to the Smithsonian Institution where they were studied by Dr. Bruno Frohlich and his forensic research team. These remains of a female were found in a plain wooden coffin. She was wearing three layers of deels, or cloaks, two of fine silk and the third of leather. The quantity of her clothing suggests that she died in winter. Their quality, and the presence of the wood frame of a tall hat favored by nobelwomen, suggests that she was an important figure in Mongol society.
www.artmap.tv/news_detail.aspx?id=1094
The exhibition shows unusually well-preserved, up to 1,300-year-old objects that have been discovered in recent years in the so-called “rock graves” in western Mongolia. The between 2005 and 2010 excavated and rescued rock grave inventories were - thanks to the great trust of the Institute of Archaeology from the Mongolian Academy of Sciences - mainly analyzed and restored in the workshop of the LVR-LandesMuseum in Bonn.
Thanks to the dry and cold climates, ephemeral materials such as wood, textiles, feathers, animal skins and metals have obtained excellent. Reflexbows, quivers, arrows with fletching and riding equipment, but also clothes - including the oldest surviving Felt-Deel - and the oldest stringed instrument in Mongolia, a harp with a horse's head, show the life of the Eurasian steppe warriors in an unknown way.
kitabhona.org.ua/attachments/132_Oka-Kultur_vza...
Статья, перевод
www.eaa2011.no/absractsearch.cfm?pMode=Abstract...
The Clothing of the Great Mongolian Empire: Whom does it belong to?
Author: Oka, Ildiko Hajnalka
ELTE University
Japan
Abstract text: During the last two decades a large quantity of Yuan era costumes has been discovered in the Autonomous Region of Inner Mongolia and in Mongolia. The textile finds from Inner Mongolia have been studied by Zhao Feng and Anne Wardwell and the costumes from Bukhiin Khoshoo and Nartyn Khad (Mongolia) by U.Erdenbat and the author of this presentation. Now we are able to analyze - even recreate – the costumes of the Great Mongolian Empire because according the pictorial representations of the costumes, they were very similar in every part of the Empire. In the imperial workshops of the Yuan the forcibly resettled textile workers from Central and Western Asia worked together with the Chinese artisans. This multiethnic workforce worked for multiethnic elite: their products were distributed by the imperial court to the members of the military and the administration, or presented to foreign dignitaries. These nasij textiles and costumes were highly valued not only because they were woven of golden threads and had an intricate and bold pattern but because they symbolized the power and wealth of the greatest empire of the era. But exactly whom do they belong? The Mongolian researchers (and public) consider these costumes as essentially Mongolian costumes. On the other hand, the Chinese scientists' opinion is that the Yuan dynasty thought Mongolian in origin, was a ruling dynasty of China ergo these costumes belong to the China’s costume history. Other countries, which territory belonged to the Great Mongol Empire, and which culture and clothing were strongly influenced by it, have a similar opinion. The clothing of the Mongol Empire was the part of an imperial culture: the Yuan’s was even regulated by a Dress Code; every official had to dress accordingly to his (or her) status. Not surprisingly, it had a long-lasting impact on the clothing of every people under its rule (and even outside of it). This presentation discusses the meaning and symbolism of the costumes in their own time and society.