Tantour

Part of a series on
Arabic culture
Architecture
Styles
  • Islamic
  • Yemeni
  • Nabataean
  • Umayyad
  • Abbasid
  • Fatimid
  • Moorish
  • Mamluk


Features

Types


  • Khalij (Arabian Peninsula)
  • Arab Mashriq (Levant)
  • Mashriq (Mesopotamia)
  • Mawset (Egypt)
  • Mawset (Sudan)
  • Arab Maghreb (North Africa)
Language

Prose

Islamic

Poetry

Genres

Forms

Arabic prosody

National literatures of Arab States

  • v
  • t
  • e
Tantour on a Druze woman in Chouf, Lebanon - 1870s
Recreated costume of a Lebanese princess from the nineteenth century, including a tantur

The tantour (tantoor) is a form of cone-shaped women's headdress similar to the hennin, popular in the Levant during the nineteenth century, but seldom seen after 1850 outside of use as a folk costume.[1][2]

The tradition persisted longer in Lebanon among the Druze.[citation needed]

The tantour was held in place by ribbons tied around the head. A silk scarf was wound around the base with a white veil attached to the peak. The height and composition of the tantour were proportional to the wealth of its owner, with the most splendid tantours made of gold and reaching as high as thirty inches. Some were encrusted with gems and pearls.

The tantour was a customary gift presented to the bride by her husband on their wedding day.[3]

Gallery

  • Damascus fashion, illustration from the book Popular Costumes in Turkey, 1873
    Damascus fashion, illustration from the book Popular Costumes in Turkey, 1873
  • Lebanese fashion, illustration from the book Popular Costumes in Turkey, 1873
    Lebanese fashion, illustration from the book Popular Costumes in Turkey, 1873

See also

References

  1. ^ "19th Century Lebanese Princess", Almashriq, NO: Hiof
  2. ^ "The Tantour or Shihabbiyeen". TRMKT. Retrieved 2010-08-16.
  3. ^ "Origin of Levantine Costumes". Almashriq. Hiof. Archived from the original on 2010-02-24. Retrieved 2010-08-16.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Western
culture
Formal
Semi-formal
Informal
Uniforms
Religious
Christian
Western
Eastern
Jewish
Casual
Sports
Historical
Folk
Wrapped
headwear
Hat parts
Accessories
Stub icon

This clothing-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e