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Tang Dynasty Fashion Guide for Beauties: Dressing in men's clothing and foreign attire!

During the Tang Dynasty, the fashion of wearing short-sleeved and short-sticky tops with trailing long skirts prevailed for a long time. After the height of the Tang Dynasty, the trend shifted to wide and dragging garments, with skirts trailing four to five inches on the ground. The custom of draping a shawl over the shoulders originated from the Persian region. Moreover, wearing men's clothing and foreign attire was also a fashion for women in the Tang Dynasty. Princess Taiping often wore men's clothing, described as 'a purple shirt, a jade belt, and a black gauze turban folded on top'. Wearing a foreign shirt with a turned-down collar, narrow sleeves, and soft boots was more conducive to engaging in various equestrian sports. The use of floral hairpins in the Tang Dynasty had strict hierarchical regulations. As part of the attire for noblewomen, it was generally in a set of two pieces. The first rank had nine floral hairpins; the second rank had eight; the third rank had seven. Eyebrow shapes in the Tang Dynasty were diverse, with common styles including crescent brows, willow brows, distant mountain brows, character 'eight' brows, and cloud-brushing brows. The raw materials for floral face decorations were very rich, including gold foil, paper, fish scales, pearls, mica, and more.
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Posted: May 25, 2024
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Hunan Provincial Museum

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Changsha
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Changsha, Hunan, is the perfect place for a weekend getaway from south or central China. Changsha has three highlights for me: 1. The food 🌶️ 2. Hunan Provincial Museum 🏛️ 3. The Yuelu Academy ⛩️ Hunanese food, 湘菜, is fiery hot and exquisitely flavoured. Numerous restaurants serve barbecue, beef cooked with chilli peppers and other local specialities. It's also famous for its streetfood, particularly Changsha stinky tofu (choudoufu). I'm not a big fan but many people rave about it. Just follow the odour of an open sewer to find some 😆 The Hunan Provincial Museum is excellent. The main exhibit is the treasures excavated from a Han Dynasty tomb discovered near Hunan, including thousands of well preserved grave goods. The prize attraction is a unique 'wet mummy', the body of the wife of a local ruler, which was enbalmed using a chemical process preserving the soft tissue (unlike Egyptian mummies, for example, which are dried out.) The museum entrance and main exhibits are free but some temporary exhibits require a ticket. The Yuelu Academy (岳麓书院,Yuelu Shuyuan) is an ancient centre of higher learning. Dating back centuries, it became one of China's first modern universities, Hunan University. The original academy can be visited inside the Hunan University campus. Finally, Changsha is notable for its most famous son, Mao Zedong, who was born in a village outside Changsha city (Shaoshan). Orange Island, a long low island in the Xiang River that flows through Changsha, is a pleasant park home to a massive statue of the handsome young Mao's head. He stares down the river as if looking into the future. Orange Island is also the best place to appreciate Changsha's modern skyline, which is colourfully lit at night.🌃 On several main railway lines, Changsha is only a few hours from Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Wuhan and other major cities.🚄 #qingmingtravel #urbanexplorer #lightthecity #changsha #hunan #foodie #foodieheaven #streetfood #weekendgetaway #staycation #weekendtrip
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