Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What did ancient Korean women wear on their heads?

What did ancient Korean women wear on their heads?

During the Korean Dynasty (9 18-1392), fake steamed buns were popular on the Korean peninsula.

The Korean peninsula began to wear fake buns from the Korean dynasty, and Zhongjun ordered the whole country to wear Mongolian clothes and keep Mongolian buns (braided hair). Later, Li Chenggui, the great ancestor of Korea, established the Korean Dynasty (Li Dynasty) and implemented the policy of "men are superior to women". Men resumed the Han system, and women "parallel Mongolian and Chinese", and later developed into "parallel" style. In Spring Ancestor, when a woman broke her neck and died because she was too parallel, the palace revoked the rule that married royal women and female officials must wear parallel, and banned it. From then on, it was only worn on wedding dresses, court dresses (no parallel uniforms) and prostitutes' clothes. In the early and middle period of Lee's Korea, married women, prostitutes and senior female officials all wore Jiaqing. It is also a dead letter to add parallelism to the dresses and uniforms of ladies-in-waiting and female officials. From the style of parallel addition, grades can be distinguished. Parallel lines are also symbols of status and wealth. The similarities between the rich, aristocratic women and prostitutes may be very large. Later, a wooden bun called "Looking Up at Beauty" () was developed in the palace and added to the parallel on important days. Later, women became more and more extravagant in parallel, and later, more women broke their necks and died because of excessive parallel. North Korea's Yingzu ordered the reduction of wigs used by parallel imports in the palace and negotiated with ministers to replace parallel imports with corollas, but he didn't know. Later, he adopted the request of Song Dexiang, a Confucian scholar, to ban parallel hair, and ordered aristocratic women to ban parallel hair and wear a small corolla, which was called Tou Li. In the thirty-third year of Yingzu, women in the palace and gentry were officially forbidden to add parallelism, and only civilians and untouchable women were allowed to add parallelism. Later, the married woman changed her braid into a bun, inserted a hairpin and stopped wearing it in parallel. Prostitutes still wear parallel imports. In the later period, officials' wives and royal women wore round shirts (a small dress) or on some formal occasions.