Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Introduce the development history, general characteristics and modern development of Hanbok in Japanese!

Introduce the development history, general characteristics and modern development of Hanbok in Japanese!

History of hanbok

Three Kingdoms, Silla reunification, Koryo era [BC57~ 1392]

In this era, both men and women wear jackets and trousers. Now, a long skirt has been added. The length of the jacket can cover the hips and the middle of the waist is surrounded by a belt. The width and length of trousers have been reduced, which is very convenient and practical to wear.

In order to prevent injury, women wore a long skirt for cold protection on their tops and trousers until the unified Silla era.

Especially in the Koryo period, influenced by China's court costumes, the length of the coat became shorter and the belt was gone. After Wen Yi gradually spread cotton seeds, it became a turning point in the lives of poor people who could not afford silks and satins or pearls.

Korean era [1392 ~1910]

The early court costumes, like those in the Koryo period, were all completed in five years (1474) of Five Dynasties Etiquette, and later he developed his own unique court costumes.

After Renchen's Japanese Rebellion and Bingzi's Rebellion, he accepted the idea of practical learning, formed an independent clothing culture, and the clothing was gradually simplified and practical. This feature is vividly displayed in official uniforms.

At the same time, the clothes of the poor were influenced by the strict identity system in the early days, and the colors, patterns and fabrics of the clothes were greatly restricted. However, due to the influence of practical ideas, the clothes between the nobility and the poor are gradually equal.

After Renchen's Japanese rebellion, women's dresses were mainly short coats and loose long skirts, and the underwear inside became rich and varied.

After civilization [19 10~]

In the civilized period, clothing reflected the mixed form of China and western countries. Men began to wear suits, and women began to wear suits.

More than half of the women's dresses in modern Hanbok are baggy barrel-shaped dresses and long coats, not suits. But in rural areas, traditional Hanbok is still the mainstay.

1945 After the Guangfu Festival, many people put on Hanbok in order to resist the Japanese clothing rule system. 1950 after the Korean war, suits became popular clothes under the influence of the United States.