Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - The Qing Dynasty history of the real look, and the Qing Palace drama the same?

The Qing Dynasty history of the real look, and the Qing Palace drama the same?

An old photo, a period of past history, unlike today's various beauty cameras and powerful "PS" technology, a hundred years ago, the old photos may not look too clear, photographic skills are also not pass, but the content of the shooting out of the real, Today, we will look at a group of late Qing dynasty noblewomen of the old photos, to expose the most real Manchu royal family, so you until Those Gege, noblewomen in the end what look like, do not be the Qing Palace drama in the bright and shiny flag dress beauty to deceive.

First is the identity. The emperor's daughter is not known as Gege, Gege is a generic name, the daughter of the Prince's clan are also known as Gege, the emperor's daughter is only not yet grown up to obtain the title in accordance with the sequence is known as Gege, once the title is known as the princess.

Gege also has another meaning, that is, prince's concubine also known as Gege, so do not make a mistake, was some Qing dynasty drama a fool, thought the emperor's daughter are called Gege.

These Gege as well as the late Qing noblewomen wearing in fact not as we imagine that bright and shiny, to know that time the printing and dyeing technology is very general, manufacturing technology is not as good as the current , so from the photo we can see, Manchu Qing noblewomen wearing clothing on the body is not at all free flowing, instead of heavy, of course, this is also the case of the emperor's daughter. , of course, this also has to do with the weather in the north.

This photo is the formal group photo of those Gege, everyone dressed better, which is able to see some gorgeous shadow out.

Looking at these photos, the biggest experience is that the Manchu royal women do like to comb the flag head, hair disk into the "two head", and then do other modelling, such as the "big pull the wings", "rack head", "tin head", etc., above the insertion of the precious decorations , showing the royal style.

I don't know if you have found, most of these noblewomen's faces are richer, which is actually the result of two reasons. On the one hand, at that time and not the pursuit of thin for beauty, but more the pursuit of health of the United States, plump on behalf of the days of good, eat well, is the most intuitive embodiment of the difference between those commoners, of course, they will not go to intentionally pursuing thin; on the other hand, the Manchu nobles is the northern nomadic people into the Customs, the bones of the big, and therefore can not do that kind of weak willow wind posture.

There is another point that most people will probably ignore, that is, these noblewomen wear shoes. We usually watch the Qing dynasty drama will find those women wearing high flower pot bottom, so the reality of the Manchu noblewoman will wear this flower pot bottom? Yes, but there are also wrapped small feet.

Flower pot bottom is the traditional Manchu dress,It is said that because the Manchu women need to go up to the mountains to work, in order not to get dirty skirt, so the production of this high flower pot bottom, to the back of the Qing dynasty nobles clothing features, as for the flower pot bottom is so high whether it is convenient to walk, at least on the As for whether it is easy to walk with such a high flowerpot bottom, at least as far as the photos are concerned, there are still a lot of people wearing flowerpot bottoms, and it seems that walking is not a concern.

But since the Manchu Qing Dynasty entered the country, many customs have begun to converge with the Han, including the matter of wrapping small feet. Wrapped small feet in our view today is a bad habit, but at that time is a fashion, Manchu Qing women are affected by this idea began to wrap up the feet, even if the emperor again and again prohibited, but also can not put an end to this fashion, from the photo we can see, there are indeed some of the feet of the so-called "three-inch golden lotus".