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Hanbok
(Traditional
Korean clothing)
Since ancient times, Koreans have been wearing the traditional
dress known as hanbok. This generally consists of pants
or a skirt with a jacket and robe, a tripartite arrangement
that has remained unchanged since ancient times. Another
distinctive point is the importance attached to the hat,
known as gwanmo. Koreans have worn different clothing
according to their social status, making dress an important
mark of rank. The ruling class, including royalty, wore
impressive costumes with embroidered insignia on the front
and back and adorned themselves with necklaces, bracelets,
rings, and other jewelry.
As seen in a mural of the Goguryeo Tomb of the Dancers
in Manchuria, men and women wore jackets that came down
to their hips with pants or a skirt underneath. Over this
they wore a robe with the collar, hem, and cuffs trimmed
in a different color. From then until Goryeo times, the
king and officials wore colorful clothing while commoners
were restricted to an undyed plain jacket and pants. This
simple costume of the common people was maintained throughout
the Joseon period. The official and ceremonial dress of
the ruling class and royalty were influenced by China
from the Unified Silla to Joseon times and the everyday
dress of jacket and pants for men or jacket and skirt
for women remain largely unchanged. |
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This basic
dress was worn by everyone from royalty to peasants,
but distinctions of status were marked by official
clothes, sacrificial robes, and ceremonial dress.
The basic costume also varied with the seasons,
lined clothes being worn in spring and autumn, unlined
clothes in summer, and cotton-wadded or quilted
clothes or furs in winter. The common people made
their clothes out of undyed material, which is why
Koreans are often called the "white-clad folk."
Hanbok can be classified
according to function: everyday dress, ceremonial
clothes worn on formal occasions such as a child's
first birthday, weddings and funerals. Costumes
were made for special purposes, such as those worn
by the officiants at Jongmyo Shrine, shamans, or
performers of traditional dances. Popular forms
of hanbok included the striped costume worn by children
on their first birthday, the red skirt and yellow
jacket sported by young women of marriageable age,
the wedding costumes known as wonsam for the bride
and gwanbok for the groom, and the red skirt and
green jacket worn by a newlywed woman. There are
many varieties of hanbok, all of which are full
of dignity and elegance.
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