History of Thai clothing
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Thai traditional costumes vary by city and the ruler of each historical period.[1] Thai clothes can be classified according to six distinct periods of history; beginning with the 6th century.[2] Previously, traditional Thai clothes were worn daily; however, they are now only worn on auspicious functions such as Thai traditional marriage ceremonies.
Dvaravati[]
Dvaravati style began in 6th to the 11th century .[3] The style was influenced by the Indian style that used colored stones as accessories.[4] Men's clothes during that time the pants were similar to Indian loincloths with a silk top or no top. Accessories were golden necklaces and metal belts. On women's clothes, the tops were usually one cloth brace on the shoulder or tightly wrapped around the breasts with a long skirt from waist to ankle. Accessories were similar to those of the men.
Lopburi[]
Lopburi style was the fashion from the 7th to 14th centuries. This period was ruled by the Lopburi or Lavo Kingdom.[5][6] Men's clothes were short sarongs worn tight around the waist about knee length with a metal belt. Women's clothes were sometimes without top or a cloth wrapping the breasts, with a short sarong. Both ends of the sarong came together in the front to look like a stripe.
Thai clothing style of the Lopburi period
Thai dancers wearing Lopburi style clothing
Sukhothai[]
Sukhothai clothing style became the fashion in 13-15th century. During the period The city-state of Sukhothai was united other Tai city-states into one kingdom. Sukhothai Men's clothing was a simple full sleeved top with a long V shape neck and a cloth brace on their shoulders. The loincloth was made of silk with a big metal or golden belt. Women's clothing was a long silk sarong with flowers painted on it. The top normally is a full sleeved silk cloth. Married women wore one cloth wrapped around the breasts made of silk or other fabric.[7]
Ayutthaya[]
Ayutthaya clothing was the style during the 14-18th centuries. Ayutthaya city was the capital of Thai kingdom for 417 years, the longest period of Thailand that was ruled under one monarch.[8] Many styles clothing followed the period of Ayutthaya but the fashion changed frequently under the influence from various countries who come into contact and trading with the kingdom.
Historically, both Thai males and females dressed themselves with a loincloth wrap called chong kraben. Men wore their chong kraben to cover the waist to halfway down the thigh, while women covered the waist to well below the knee.[9] Bare chests and bare feet were accepted as part of the Thai formal dress code, and is observed in murals, illustrated manuscripts, and early photographs up to the middle of the 19th century.[9] In the royal court, royalty and nobility men are wearing lomphok, a tall pointed hat, made of white cloth wrapped around a bamboo frame, and Khrui, a light outer garment worn as a gown or robe in certain ceremonial settings. Traditional Thai attire has changed significantly throughout the Rattanakosin period.[citation needed]
Thai traditional costumes in Bangkok National Museum
Ok-khun Chamnan, a 17th-century Siamese ambassador who visited France and Rome on an embassy in 1688
Kosa Pan wearing lomphok and Khrui, 1686
Claude de Forbin wearing Ayutthayan mandarin dress
a Siamese official wearing Lomphok and Chong kraben, Lifestyle of Siamese people and Traditional Thai house by Simon de La Loubère
Thonburi[]
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Rattanakosin[]
Old Rattanakosin[]
Early Rattanakosin central Thais dressed as same as Ayutthaya period, however, after the Second Fall of Ayutthaya and repeated Burmese invasions, central Thai women began cutting their hair in a crew-cut short style, which remained the national hairstyle until the 1900s.[10] Prior to the 20th century, the primary markers that distinguished class in Thai clothing were the use of cotton and silk cloths with printed or woven motifs, but both commoners and royals alike wore wrapped, not stitched clothing.[11]
Prince Yodyingyot, later Bowon Wichaichan with Old Rattanakosin style clothing
Photograph of the Siamese embassy to France in 1861, wearing the formal clothing of the Early Rattanakosin period
Clothing of Thai boatman, holding an oar
Thai men squat with Old Rattanakosin style clothing
Queen Debsirindra, the second consort of King Mongkut with Old Rattanakosin style clothing, 1855
Thai woman portrait with Old Rattanakosin style clothing
Modern Rattanakosin[]
From the 1860s onward, Thai royals "selectively adopted Victorian corporeal and sartorial etiquette to fashion modern personas that were publicized domestically and internationally by means of mechanically reproduced images."[11] Stitched clothing, including court attire and ceremonial uniforms, were invented during the reign of King Chulalongkorn.[11] Western forms of dress became popular among urbanites in Bangkok during this time period.[11] During the early 1900s, King Vajiravudh launched a campaign to encourage Thai women to wear long hair instead of traditional short hair, and to wear pha sinh (ผ้าซิ่น), a tubular skirt, instead of the chong kraben (โจงกระเบน), a cloth wrap.[12]
King Chulalongkorn wearing the raj pattern costume, consisting of a white Nehru-style jacket with five buttons and a chong kraben
King Vajiravudh wearing the raj pattern covered with the khrui
Fascist Thailand[]
On 15 January 1941, Plaek Pibulsonggram issued a Thai cultural mandate to modernize and westernize Thai dress, by deeming long-practiced customs of wearing underpants, wearing no shirt, or wearing a wraparound cloth, as forms of inappropriate public attire.[13]
Contemporary Thai clothing[]
The formal Thai costume, known in Thai as ชุดไทยพระราชนิยม (RTGS: chut thai phra ratcha niyom, literally Thai dress of royal endorsement), includes several sets of dress, designed as the Thai national costume in formal occasions. Although described and intended for use as national costume, they are of relatively modern origins, having been conceived in the second half of the 20th century.
Princess Sirindhorn wearing the "Chut Thai Amarin" (Thai: ชุดไทยอัมรินทร์
Princess Soamsavali wearing the "Chut Thai Amarin" (Thai: ชุดไทยอัมรินทร์
Princess Ubolratana wearing the "Chut Thai Boromphiman" (Thai: ชุดไทยบรมพิมาน)
Former Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva wearing the chut thai phra ratcha niyom
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Silahorm, kanokporn, kanhittha et al (2007),Thai Costume(In thai).
- ^ Bangkok studio. History of Thai Traditional Clothes(In thai).
- ^ Hanisah (November 2007)(In Thai).
- ^ Bangkok studio. Tavaravadee Clothes(In Thai).
- ^ baanjomyut.com (august, 2001)(In thai)
- ^ Ohm Ratchavej (2000)The Thai History. Amarin(In thai)
- ^ Chayada (2009),thaigoodview.com(In thai)
- ^ Thailand Knowledge Center (March 2012),The costume of Ayutthaya(In thai)
- ^ Jump up to: a b Terwiel, Barend Jan (2007). "The Body and Sexuality in Siam: A First Exploration in Early Sources" (PDF). Manusya: Journal of Humanities (14): 42–55.
- ^ Jotisalikorn, Chami (2013). Thailand's Luxury Spas: Pampering Yourself in Paradise. Tuttle Publishing. p. 183.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Peleggi, Maurizio (2010). Mina Roces (ed.). The Politics of Dress in Asia and the Americas. Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 9781845193997.
- ^ Sarutta (10 September 2002). "Women's Status in Thai Society". Thaiways Magazine. Archived from the original on 31 October 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
- ^ The Royal Gazette, Vol. 58, Page 113. January 21, B.E. 2484 (C.E. 1941). Retrieved on June 4, 2010.
External links[]
- "การแต่งกายของไทย". Postjung.com. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
- "ถ่ายภาพชุดไทย ภาพโบราณ แต่งชุดไทย ถ่ายภาพ ล้านนา ทวารวดี อยุธยา รัตนโกสินทร์". Bangkokstudiothai.com. Archived from the original on 2012-08-05. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
- teenee.com. "การแต่งกายของสตรีไทยตามประวัติศาสตร์โบราณคดีจนถึงปัจจุบัน : อาหารสมอง". Variety.teenee.com. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
- "การแต่งกายสมัยอยุธยา (พ.ศ. 1893 ถึง พ.ศ. 2310)". Baanjomyut.com. Retrieved 2012-07-21.
- การแต่งกายสมัยอยุธยา
- Thai culture
- Thai clothing
- Folk costumes