Paofu

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Paofu an entity of type: Thing

Paofu (Chinese: 袍服; pinyin: páofú; lit. 'robe'), also known as pao (Chinese: 袍; pinyin: páo; lit. 'robe') for short, is a form of a long, one-piece robe in Hanfu, which is characterized by the natural integration of the upper and lower part of the robe which is cut from a single fabric. The term is often used to refer to the jiaolingpao and the yuanlingpao. The jiaolingpao was worn since the Zhou dynasty and became prominent in the Han dynasty. The jiaolingpao was a unisex, one-piece robe; while it was worn mainly by men, women could also wear it. It initially looked similar to the ancient shenyi; however, these two robes are structurally different from each other. With time, the ancient shenyi disappeared while the paofu evolved gaining different features in each succeeding dynasties; the rdf:langString
rdf:langString Paofu
xsd:integer 67347102
xsd:integer 1111816485
rdf:langString 團領
rdf:langString 直領交衽
rdf:langString
rdf:langString p'o
rdf:langString left
rdf:langString Pao
rdf:langString
rdf:langString 袍服
rdf:langString Front view of a zhijupao with a youren closure
rdf:langString Inner construction of a zhijupao, the upper and lower garment are sewn together
rdf:langString A daopao, a form of paofu with a youren closure, Ming dynasty
rdf:langString horizontal
rdf:langString 단령
rdf:langString 직령교임
rdf:langString 직령대임
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Daopao .jpg
rdf:langString Zhiju1.jpg
rdf:langString Zhiju2.jpg
rdf:langString pou4
rdf:langString Gown or robe
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Páo
rdf:langString Páofú
xsd:integer 217 234
xsd:integer 10 12 13 14
xsd:integer 2
xsd:integer 1
rdf:langString Han Tomb Mural, Luoyang.jpg
rdf:langString Zhao Mengfu wearing a yuanlingpao , dated 1296.
rdf:langString Men and women dressed in jiaolingpao , Han Tomb Mural, Luoyang
rdf:langString po
rdf:langString danryeong
rdf:langString Jiknyeonggyoim
rdf:langString jingnyeongdaeim
xsd:integer 300
rdf:langString Paofu (Chinese: 袍服; pinyin: páofú; lit. 'robe'), also known as pao (Chinese: 袍; pinyin: páo; lit. 'robe') for short, is a form of a long, one-piece robe in Hanfu, which is characterized by the natural integration of the upper and lower part of the robe which is cut from a single fabric. The term is often used to refer to the jiaolingpao and the yuanlingpao. The jiaolingpao was worn since the Zhou dynasty and became prominent in the Han dynasty. The jiaolingpao was a unisex, one-piece robe; while it was worn mainly by men, women could also wear it. It initially looked similar to the ancient shenyi; however, these two robes are structurally different from each other. With time, the ancient shenyi disappeared while the paofu evolved gaining different features in each succeeding dynasties; the paofu continues to be worn even in present day. The term paofu refers to the "long robe" worn by ancient Chinese, and can include several form of Chinese robes of various origins and cuts, including Changshan, Qipao, Shenyi, Tieli, Zhisun, Yesa.
rdf:langString Robe/ Chinese robe
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 25381

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