- The
Sharbush or Harbush, Sarposh,
Serpush (Arabic: شَربوش, romanized:
sharbūsh, Gr****: σαρπούζιν, Turkish: Serpuş)
probably derived from
Persian word Serpush...
- 117r
Maqama 43: the
Sheikh of
Diyar Bakr in
Turkic dress,
wearing the
sharbūsh with tall cap.
Maqamat 43,
Arabe 3929, 157r.
Maqama 18: the
beautiful slave...
- 126–127: "Official"
Turkish figures wear a
standard combination of a
sharbūsh, a three-quarters
length robe, and boots. Arab figures, in contrast, have...
-
their typical sharbush type of
headgear and robes. Kitâb al-Diryâq,
folio 24 (royal
court detail,
ruler in
Turkic dress,
wearing the
sharbush hat). Figures...
-
Turkic dress,
wearing the
sharbush hat.
Figures in
Turkic dress, with
aqbiya turkiyya coat,
tiraz armbands,
boots and
sharbush hat. Kitāb al-Diryāq, Jazira...
-
Seljuk Anatolia Turkic amir with
guards in
Maqamat al-Hariri,
wearing the
sharbush headgear, the three-quarters
length robe, and boots, at Rayy, Iran, 1227...
-
Baghdad in 1258. The m****cript
depicts horse-riders who wear the
Turkic sharbūsh headgear. The 1210 copy does not
mention Baghdad, but is
considered a copy...
- Islāmic life." Left
frontispiece (1v):
ruler in
Turkic dress (long braids,
Sharbush fur hat, boots, ****ing coat), in the
Maqamat of al-Hariri, 1237 CE, possibly...
- Kitāb al-bayṭara,
published in
Baghdad in 1209. The
horserider is
wearing a
Turkic sharbūsh.
Egyptian National Library and Archives, (Khalil Agha F8)....
-
minted at
Mayyafariqin in 587 AH (1190/01 AD)
shows Saladin wearing the
sharbush hat of a Saljuq-style
Turkish ruler."
Lesley Baker,
Patricia (1988). A...