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  2. Qizhuang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qizhuang

    By 1911, the topple of the last Qing dynasty Emperor Puyi by Sun Yat-sen and the demise of the Qing court led to the extinction of the Qing dynasty sartorial regulations. [ 37 ] : 34 When the Republic of China was established, men all over China cut their queues and wore Western-style clothing.

  3. Liangbatou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liangbatou

    Liangbatou was made famous by Empress Dowager Cixi and her Manchu court ladies, becoming popular and evolving starting from the Qing dynasty through the Republican Period (1910–1940s). It was known nationally and internationally for its towering shape and ornamentation, and was influenced by the theatrical representations of non- Chinese ...

  4. Longhua (collar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longhua_(collar)

    Robes and jackets in the Qing dynasty were generally round-necked. [2] Clothing with high collars or neckbands already existed since the late Ming dynasty, however, in Qing, high collar clothing were only worn on an occasional basis. [2] Detachable collars were therefore produced and sold separately from the garments. [2]

  5. Imperial yellow jacket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_yellow_jacket

    Since yellow clothing was normally reserved for the Imperial family, the yellow jacket came to be regarded as the highest honour of the Qing dynasty. Towards the end of the Qing dynasty the prestige of the yellow jacket had declined somewhat; in one infamous case, a yellow jacket was granted to a train driver for his service to Empress Dowager ...

  6. Women's clothing in China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_clothing_in_China

    The collar is of the same colour as the clothing. Towards the start of the Qing dynasty, the skirt was mostly baizhequn (百摺裙, lit. "hundred pleats skirt") or mamianqun (馬面裙, lit. "horse face skirt"). [17] Ming dynasty portrait of a noblewoman wearing yuanlingshan, phoenix crown and xiapei

  7. Empress Nara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empress_Nara

    The Empress of the Nara clan (11 March 1718 [1] – 19 August 1766 [2]) of the Manchu Bordered Blue Banner Ula-Nara Clan, was the second wife of the Qianlong Emperor. [3] She was the empress consort of the Qing dynasty from 1750 until her death in 1766.

  8. Chaozhu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaozhu

    [2] [1] The Qing dynasty regulated the materials used for each court rank, [1] including types of precious stones and the colour of the silk tapes and cords. [4]: 52 [1] Men wore one chaozhu and only women of high-ranking status were allowed to wear triple chaozhu (one at the neck and two diagonally over each shoulder and underarms).

  9. Chinese clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_clothing

    The Qing dynasty time to implement shaved hair and easy to dress, Shunzhi nine years (1652), the "dress color shoulder ordinance" promulgated, since the abolition of the Ming dynasty's crowns, gowns, and all the costumes of the Han, but the Manchu dress at the same time absorbed the texture pattern of the Ming dynasty dress.