Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - The legend of the Chinese dress, short stories and so on.

The legend of the Chinese dress, short stories and so on.

Hanbok, also known as Hanbok, the traditional dress of the Han Chinese people, also known as Hanbok, Chinese clothing, is from the reign of the Yellow Emperor (about 2698 BC) to the end of the Ming Dynasty (the 17th century AD) this four thousand years, to the center of Chinese ceremonial culture, through the successive dynasties of the Han Chinese people respected the Zhou rituals, the image of heaven and law of the earth and the formation of a thousand years of unchanged etiquette and clothing system. Since the Yellow Emperor, Yao and Shun put down their clothes and the world was ruled by them, the Chinese dress already had a basic form, and through the inheritance of the Zhou rites and laws, the Han Dynasty formed a perfect system of clothes and crowns and popularized it among the people, and also influenced the whole Han cultural circle through Confucianism and the Chinese legal system. The Han people, Han clothes, Chinese language and Han customs thus got their names.

A group of young Chinese people, with their crowns and sashes, are walking in modern cities built of steel and concrete, and with their impulses and dreams, they are hoping to re-read the Chinese culture under the slogan of "Hanbok Revival", using Hanbok as a vehicle. "In some major occasions, Japanese people wear kimono, Koreans wear hanbok, but the embarrassment and strange thing is that we Chinese actually can not find their own clothes, in fact, kimono and hanbok are all derived from our Hanbok. Hanbok is just a carrier, the long Chinese culture is what we really want to revitalize."

The basic features of Hanbok are cross-necked, right-over-obese, knotted with rope and belt, and also with belt hooks, etc., and with the disk collar, straight collar, etc. as a useful supplement. Structurally, Hanbok is divided into ten parts: collar, lapel, train, kimono, sleeve, dickey, obeisance, belt, and tie.