What kind of hair did women often comb at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty? Where are the clothes?
According to ancient records, there were Lingyun steamed buns, Wang Xian's Nine Rings steamed buns, Shenluan steamed buns and Ji Xian steamed buns in the Qin Dynasty. Ma Su's Notes on Hanako in China in the Five Dynasties said: "Qin Shihuang was kind to immortals, and he often made the imperial secretary comb a fairy bun and paste five-color Hanako, painting clouds, phoenixes and tigers soaring. There are Xiaoma Bao, Yaotai Bao, Yingchun Bao, Hanging Cloud Bao, Wandering Bao, Lily Bao, Tongxin Bao and so on. Among all kinds of bun styles, "falling horse bun" is a very distinctive hairstyle. " "History of the Five Elements of the Han Dynasty" wrote: "In Yuan Jia's home, Kyoto women frowned and cried, falling into a ponytail ... and then tied it into a ponytail. "There is also a cloud in The Biography of Ji Liang in the Later Han Dynasty:" (Liang Ji's wife and grandson) are as beautiful as a demon, flirting, crying, ponytailing, bending over and laughing at dental caries. "The so-called' frown' means that the eyebrows are drawn thin and curved, as if there is a sad state." "Make-up" means applying rouge thinly to the lower eyelid, which looks as if you have just cried. "Bend your back" means that your feet and body are not in a line, and you walk like your waist is broken. "Caries smile" means that you laugh like a toothache and touch your cheek with your hand. All these can increase the charm and femininity of women. The Tang Dynasty quoted "Customs Tong" in the Notes to the Book of the Later Han Dynasty as saying: "On the one hand, those who fall into a ponytail, on the other hand, started from what Ji's surname did, and the capital will take effect immediately. "According to the above information, ponytail is a kind of one-sided bun, which was created by Sun Shou, the wife of the Eastern Han Dynasty. She is good at dressing up as a demon. Because it looks seductive, the women in Beijing (now Luoyang) jumped into a herd and learned to comb the fallen ponytail. And because it looks like it fell from a horse, it is crooked. The practice of this kind of bun is to separate a lock of hair in the bun and hang it to one side, giving people the feeling that the bun is scattered. This is the basic feature of the bun, hence the name. Falling horse bun is a kind of hanging bun. As for when it appeared, in addition to the above-mentioned saying of Emperor Huan of the Eastern Han Dynasty, there is also the saying of Emperor Wu of the Western Han Dynasty. The main feature of this bun is that it hangs over the shoulders. Look at the Han women who unearthed the ponytail of pottery figurines from the Western Han Tomb in Anrenjiapo, the Han women who unearthed the ponytail of painted wooden figurines from the tomb of Fenghuang Mountain 168 in Jiangling, Hubei, and the Han women who unearthed the ponytail of pottery figurines from the Han Tomb in Jiaxiang, Shandong. Although ponytails were all the rage, they were not popular for a long time, and few women combed them after the Eastern Han Dynasty. Women's clothes in the Han Dynasty are long and deep clothes, with skirts under the tops and trousers under the tops. In the early Western Han Dynasty, the clothes were mostly long and deep clothes that mopped the floor or reached the feet, and the clothes were tight as a whole, that is, the deep clothes or skirts were stuffed in the knees of the lower body. Among them, there is a long bundle of deep clothes wrapped around the body for several weeks, that is, the skirt is connected for a long time and wrapped around the body for several weeks. This kind of deep clothing continues the characteristics of Chu clothing in the Warring States period.