Hanbok (Korean한복; Hanja韓服; lit. Korean dress) nya gari tradisional bansa Korea. Leka jaku hanbok tebal dikena orang Korea Selatan; seraya orang Korea Utara ngumbai gari nya chosŏn-ot (조선옷, lit.Templat:ThinspTemplat:Gloss). Gari tu mega dikena bala diaspora Korea.[1][2] Koryo-saram—raban bansa Korea ti diau ba kandang menua ti kala dipegai Serakup Soviet—mega ngetanka tradisyen pekayan hanbok sida.[3]

Hanbok
Hanbok (female and male)
Orang ngena hanbok
MaterialBemacham
Endur asalKorea
Diberi kelalaKenyau urung jeman Goguryeo
Hanbok
North Korean name
Chosŏn'gŭl조선옷
Hancha朝鮮옷
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationJoseon-ot
McCune–ReischauerChosŏn-ot
South Korean name
Hangul한복
Hanja韓服
Transcriptions
Revised RomanizationHanbok
McCune–ReischauerHanbok

Sejarah

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Orang Korea udah ngena hanbok kenyau ari kelia. Gambar visual hanbok ke pemadu tumu ulih dipansik ari jeman Tiga Perintah Korea (57 SM ngagai 668 AD) enggau pun ari bansa Proto-Korea ke diatu nyadi Korea utara enggau Manchuria. Baju nya mega bisi digambarka ba mural pendam ari jeman Goguryeo (abad ke-4 ngagai ke-6 AD), enggau struktur asas hanbok ditumbuhka kenyau ari pemadu laun jeman tu.[4] Hanbok kelia ngundan jeogori (baju), baji (tanchut), chima (skirt), enggau po (kot). Struktur paung hanbok dikemansangka dikena ngemudahka pengawa mindah; iya nyerakupka mayuh motif ari Mu-ism.[5]

Malin

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  1. "Minority Ethnic Clothing : Korean (Chaoxianzu) Clothing". 2022-10-27. Archived from the original on 27 October 2022. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
  2. Korean Culture and Information Service, 2018, Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism of the Republic of Korea
  3. Ji-Yeon O. Jo (30 November 2017). "Koreans in the Commonwealth of Independent States". Homing: An Affective Topography of Ethnic Korean Return Migration. Nonolulu: University of Hawaii Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780824872519. Retrieved 22 July 2024. [...] Koryǒ Saram [...] did their best to maintain Korean traditions - for example, observing major Korean holidays, wearing hanbok (traditional Korean clothing) on culturally important days, playing customary Korean games, and making traditional rice cakes with traditional Korean tools that they had crafted in diaspora.
  4. The Dreams of the Living and the Hopes of the Dead-Goguryeo Tomb Murals, 2007, Ho-Tae Jeon, Seoul National University Press
  5. Flags, color, and the legal narrative : public memory, identity, and critique. Anne Wagner, Sarah Marusek. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. 2021. p. 125. ISBN 978-3-030-32865-8. OCLC 1253353500. The basic structure of the Hanbok dress was designed to facilitate ease of movement, incorporating many shamanistic motifs.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)