-
government officials in the Song and Ming dynasties, the
latter known as the
wushamao (烏紗帽), was
based on the ****ou of the Tang dynasty.: 71–72 The ****ou was...
-
predecessor to the Mũ cánh chuồn or also
called Mũ ô sa,
which was
derived from the
Chinese Wushamao (烏紗帽). 19th
century Phốc Đầu with Kim Bác Sơn v t e...
- cover".
Commonly as "
wushamao" (乌纱帽), or "black-muslin hat".
Standard headwear of
officials during the Ming dynasty. The term
wushamao is
still frequently...
- wubian,
baishamao (白紗帽;
white gauze cap), and the
wushamao.
Civil officials wore jinxianguan, and the
wushamao was po****r and was worn from
court officials...
-
wujiaodai (Chinese: 烏角帶; pinyin: wūjiǎodài; lit. 'black horn belt') and
wushamao. This set was
known as
Qingsufu (Chinese: 青素服). The Ming
dynasty yuanlingpao...
- Head of the
jinyiwei had to wear a red-coloured
mangfu or
feiyufu with a
wushamao (lit. 'black
gauze hat') and a
phoenix belt on
sacrificial and ceremonial...
- robes), silk, and
royal crowns (such as the sammo,
known in
Chinese as the
wushamao, a
jewelled crown). From the
reign of
Satto to the 16th century, Chinese...