Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Korea traditional steamed bun
Korea traditional steamed bun
During the Southern and Northern Dynasties, Sui and Tang Dynasties, most men wore gauze crowns and their hair hung over their heads or behind their heads. Some of them form two "combs" (bun), some form a comb, and some bend into slender "hairpins" and put them on their foreheads. This is invisible, but one thing is certain. Han people don't have the habit of shaving their heads, and they don't have long hair like in TV dramas. By the middle of the Ming Dynasty, the quarrel between adult men gradually disappeared. Generally, working people tie their hair into three or two strands at the back of their heads, while literati, scholars, bureaucrats and nobles generally tie their hair on the top of their heads and wrap a net towel around their heads to fix their hair. This image can be seen in the Korean drama "Empress Ming Cheng", so the hairstyle of Han men sometimes represents the level of status. Not everyone is the same.
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