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" The blankets are put on like Highland plaids, come down to near the knee, and are fastened with a belt. They also wear cotton trowsers, which, as well as their shirts, are worked all over with flowers in red and black worsted. The trowsers are slit at... "
The Book of Costume: Or, Annals of Fashion: From the Earliest Period to the ... - Page 449
by Mary Margaret Stanley Egerton Countess of Wilton - 1846 - 482 pages
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Modern Geography: A Description of the Empires, Kingdoms, States ..., Volume 1

John Pinkerton - 1804 - 694 pages
...trimmed with various furs. The shoes, or rather slippers, are slight, and unfit for much exercise. The dress of the women differs little from that of the men, the chief distinction being the head-dress; that of the fair sex consisting of a bonnet, like an inverted...
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Elements of Useful Knowledge: Containing a Historical and ..., Volume 3

Noah Webster - 1806 - 304 pages
...of cloth, trimmed with fur. Their shoes or slippers are slightly made. A turban is worn on the head. The dress of the women differs little from that of the men, except the head dress, which is a sort of bonnet like an inverted basket, formed of pasteboard elegantly...
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An account of the kingdom of Caubul and its dependencies in Persia, Tartary ...

Mountstuart Elphinstone (hon.) - 1815 - 744 pages
...which, as well as their shirts, are worked all over with flowers in red and black worsted. The trowsers are slit at the bottom, so as to make a sort of fringe....head, and over it a small cap, round which is a little turban. They have also silver ornaments and many cowry shells. The virgins wear a red fillet round...
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Russia

Josiah Conder - 1825 - 372 pages
...which puts their horses in disorder. As they are almost always on horseback, they are excellent riders. The dress of the women differs little from that of the men ; only their gowns are somewhat longer than the coats of the men, a little ornamented, and bordered...
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Cosmorama: The Manners, Customs, and Costumes, of All Nations of the World ...

Jehoshaphat Aspin - 1834 - 300 pages
...reindeer, bears, bulls, and sheep, with the hair worn inwards or outwards according to the season. The dress of the women differs little from that of the men ; except that they wear neckerchiefs, short aprons of painted cloth, and rings on their fingers and...
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The Chinese Repository, Volume 4

1836 - 604 pages
...valued according to the generations they have passed through, or the number of people they have slain. The dress of the women differs little from that of the men, except that they have a finer scarf or salindong than that worn by the men, and lie their hair up much...
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The Book of Costume: Or, Annals of Fashion: From the Earliest Period to the ...

Mary Margaret Stanley Egerton Countess of Wilton - 1846 - 508 pages
...but wear beards four or five inches long. Those in good circumstances, and those near the Aflghauns, wear a shirt beneath their vest ; and in summer the...head, and over it a small cap, round which is a little turban : they have also silver ornaments and many cowry shells. " The Dooraunees wear a cotton shirt,...
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A Journey to Katmandu (the Capital of Nepaul) with the Camp of Jung Bahadoor

Laurence Oliphant - 1852 - 257 pages
...I did not see in the valley of Katmandu. In the colder months they wear home-spun woollen clothes. The dress of the women differs little from that of the men, except that the coat is longer, resembling a dressing-gown, and a sort of bodice is generally worn...
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A Journey to Katmandu: (the Capital of Nepaul) with the Camp of Jung ...

Laurence Oliphant - 1852 - 526 pages
...I did not see in the valley of Katmandu. In the colder months they wear home-spun woollen clothes. The dress of the women differs little from that of the men, except that the coat is longer, resembling a dressing-gown, and a sort of bodice is generally worn...
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Caravan Journeys and Wanderings in Persia, Afghanistan, Turkistan, and ...

Joseph Pierre Ferrier - 1856 - 886 pages
...which, as well as their shirts, are worked all over with flowers in red and black, worsted. The trowsers are slit at the bottom, so as to make a sort of fringe. They also wear worsUil stockings, or perhaps worsted fillets, rolled round their legs ; and the warriors wear half-boots...
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