Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - How to comb ancient Korean girls’ hair

How to comb ancient Korean girls’ hair

Regarding your question, you can refer to the following relevant documents:

1China has had a great influence on the customs of the Korean Peninsula since the Tang and Song Dynasties. Even in the Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties, Korean women were often elected to the Chinese royal family. Looking for clues from some hairstyles in China at that time

2. There are a large number of modern Korean TV dramas about the ancient and modern Korean Peninsula, such as "Dae Jang Geum", "Empress Myeongseong", etc.

Regarding the former, there were many styles of combing hair in ancient China, with typical representatives in different periods.

1. Double-knife bun is also called "knife-shaped double-turned bun". According to their production methods, they may all be fake buns. These two hairstyles were once popular in the palaces of the early Tang Dynasty, and later spread among aristocratic women. They were rarely seen among women of the common people.

2,. "History of the Song Dynasty·Five Elements·Wood": "In the early days of Jianlong and the last years of Mengchang in Shu, women competed to have their hair styled into a high bun, named Chaotian bun." Chaotian bun is a kind of bun style with a high bun on top of the head. , this high bun was still followed in the Song Dynasty.

3. Falling horse bun is a kind of ancient women's bun. It started in the Han Dynasty. Its style is like a horse falling down, so it is called falling horse bun. This was the most distinctive hairstyle at the time and the most vital in history. From the Han Dynasty to the Qing Dynasty, there were also

4. In the late Tang Dynasty, women in the capital combed their hair and hugged their faces with their temples, which was shaped like a vertebrae bun. It was called "Puijia bun". Also known as "sideburns" and "phoenix head". This bun with the temples hugging the face was a popular hairstyle in the late Tang Dynasty.

5. In the early Qing Dynasty, Manchu women began to adopt this hairstyle during festive occasions. They used two flat hairpins in the shape of rows on the top of their heads. The bun was made horizontally long, which was also called Yiyutou at that time. By the end of the Qing Dynasty, the two hairs were transformed into a tall horizontal frame made of blue satin and placed on the top of the head, with tassels hanging on the sides, and the hair on the back of the head was combed into a swallowtail style, also known as drooping wings.

Regarding "Dae Jang Geum" in Korean film and television works, which is a story after 1482 (equivalent to the middle of the Ming Dynasty), some comparisons can be made.

The above answers are for your reference! hope this helps you

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