Beautiful Moroccan Traditional Clothes
List of Beautiful Traditional Moroccan Dresses

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Beautiful Moroccan Traditional Clothes
List of Beautiful Traditional Moroccan Dresses
Archaeological Museum of Patra
Golden threads and sheets shaped like pomegranate fruit. From Patras Hellenistic Period. (3rd - 2nd cent. B.C)
Oddments of golden threads, used for decorating luxury clothes. From Patras Hellenistic or Roman period.
An even more difficult thing than ancient objects of wood to be preserved, are fibers, textiles and clothes. These two pieces of purple and gold textile that wrapped the bones of a young woman, theorized to be princess Meda, are one of the very few surviving pieces of fabric. The photography of this object is by Socrates Mavrommatis.
However gold-sheet decorations of clothes* are frequently preserved, and we have several such finds even from the Bronze Age.
In the collection of the Archaeological Museum of Patras, these artifacts are from the rich burial of a young woman, found in a cist grave in the Northern Cemetery of Patras, dating from the Hellenistic Period (150-125 B.C), and constituted part of her dress.
From the museum tag:
The young woman, who was a member of the social upper class, had an exceptionally rich burial. Her skeleton, 1.40m. in length, was laid out in an extended position and most of the grave offerings were found where they had originally been placed. The diadem was found on the forehead, beside the skull was a silver comb, on the lower jaw the danake, next to the skull the cupid earrings and on the chest the necklaces. The radial pectoral ornament was found on the breast and over it the pectoral band. The four multi-spiral rings were placed on the right hand and next to it the iron scraper with the remains of a silver sheet. The bronze mirror was laid in the centre of the pelvis, while there were gold threads from a garment on the chest, the breast and the lower legs.
A closer look at the two pectoral ornaments. The banded ornament depicts a young man, possibly Hermes, and the ornament on the right depicts a scene of Hercules and the Hydra, as well as gorgon heads (on the four disks surrounding the central medallion). There was also a diadem depicting a Nike killing a bull.
*This gold sheet jewellery is also theorized to be exclusively funerary in character, because of the recurrent themes, and the fast embossing method that was used to create the elaborate scenes.
A similar burial can be found in the Archaeological Museum of Arta. It’s pretty impressive to see the amount of wealth that is often buried with a person, and it might indicate that this person could have suffered an untimely end, a young woman, probably a daughter of a rich family whose death would leave her relatives grief-stricken. The precious objects buried with her could be parts of her future dowry, and as she was never to be married and have children of her own to pass these objects on, they would accompany her to her final resting place.
What was of particular interest for me was the placement of the box mirror onto the pelvis of the deceased, and I would like to find out if that was a common practice. Bronze mirrors are objects of particular aesthetic beauty, one of my favorite has a scene of two women bathing each other, and I would like to find out if they were associated with special qualities, or magical powers. The pelvis of a woman was also a special place associated with fertility and sexual health and in recent times, decorated aprons that would go over a woman’s traditional clothing would have the magical function of warding her from harm.
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Finance more museum travelling, and a good supply of caffeinated drinks here: https://ko-fi.com/isabia
He tian and momo in ancient clothes?? I don’t know why I never posted these here... they were in my sketchbook for quite some time now! As you can see I’m not that good at drawing but I loved the idea so much I just had to!
Julian Caesar
10 Oldest Pieces of Clothing and Accessories Ever Found
10 Oldest Pieces of Clothing and Accessories Ever Found
Ηow old is the oldest remnant fabric found on our planet? Who invented the sunglasses (no, sunglasses weren’t invented by Italians)? Where people wearing underwear in the old times?
It is not known when humans first began making clothing due to the fast deterioration of fabrics and materials, but genetic analysis estimates that humans began wearing clothing 170 millennia ago!
According to…
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From left to right: Vietnamese - Lê Dynasty Chinese - Ming Dynasty Korean (sorry I don’t know which period) Japanese - Edo period
Từ trái sang phải: Việt Nam - Triều Lê Trung Quốc - Triều Minh Hàn Quốc (mình không biết về sử Hàn nên chịu bộ này xuất hiện từ thời nào) Nhật Bản - Thời kỳ Edo
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The exclusivity of the imperial servants resulted from the white clothing that was reserved for them and from their specialization in certain activities.
Aloys Winterling, 2009 So does this mean drawing important Romans only in white is essentially indicting they are slaves?
Illustration of a young Tutankhamun from the book: Tutankhamun’s wardrobe: garments from the tomb of Tutankhamun.
Source: MY SCAN