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Notify me when its in stockHistorical Sources of the Turkish Clothing Industry
Önder Küçükerman (1939–)
The first period of Turkish clothing history, 19. A colorful clothing system that came from Asia and flourished in Anatolia, 22. Clothing during the Seljuk period in Anatolia, 25. The first caravanserais, caravans, and textile trade in Anatolia, 33. Fabric production and clothing regulation in Istanbul, 36. The transformation of traditional clothing and fashion in the Ottoman Empire, 41. Broadcloth (Çuha): a fabric always in high demand, 41. New clothing examples from the 17th century: Aba jackets, 43. Başmak: shoes as a complement to clothing, 45. Ferace: a general clothing system for both women and men, 47. A design covering men in the imperial harem, 50. A type of vest: Fermene, 50. Fashion created by Istanbul fire brigades in the 18th century, 51. Fashion created by state officials: the Paşalı costume, 51. A fashion-setting product: the Selimi turban, 54. An example of how the public named clothing items: the Mercan slipper, 54. Clothing regulations in the mid-18th century, 55. A widespread fashion at the end of the 18th century: wrapping a shawl sash around the waist, 57.
Guilds, the gedik system, and the textile industry as providers of Ottoman industrial norms and standards, 64. Fabrics and clothing in the 1640s, 76. Examples from Istanbul’s textile and clothing industry during the time of Evliya Çelebi, 83. A silk-weaving factory based on manual production in 1721, 88. Periods of Ottoman rapprochement with the West, 92. The Ottoman industry at the end of the 18th century, 95.
Janissary-era military clothing and its aftermath, 103. A new fashion following the abolition of the devshirme system and the establishment of the Janissary Corps, 104. The Hüseyin Pasha Naked fashion of the early 18th century, 111. Nizam-ı Cedid and a new clothing system in the Ottoman army, 115. The renewal of military clothing and the Elifi trousers, 115. An early 19th-century fashion: Sine Perçemi, 121. The Sekban-ı Cedid of 1808 and a new garment: Şubara, 121. The male robe (entari) whose use ended in 1826, 125. Establishment of the industry required for military and civilian clothing reform in the Ottoman Empire in 1828, 128. The fez, 131. The cape, 137. Memoirs of Zarif Pasha and the new military uniforms of the 1830s, 139. European clothing in the Ottoman Empire, 141. Jacket, trousers, boots, and galoshes, 143. The “Frankish” shirt, 143. The Crimean War of 1853 and the new uniform of the naval soldier, 145. The notebook of a tailor working at Topkapı Palace between 1854 and 1871, 159. Winter military clothing in the 1860s: Avniye, 161. Men’s clothing during the reigns of Abdülmecid and Abdülaziz: the Istanbulin, 161. The yaşmak in women’s clothing, 161. Women’s entry into working life in 1869, 163. Clothing advertisements in Istanbul newspapers in 1884, 165. The redingote replacing the Istanbulin, 167. The Zuaf uniform in Yıldız Palace, 169. Ottoman textiles and clothing through the observations of French painter Pretextat Lecomte in 1903, 169. The new development period of the Turkish textile and clothing industry after 1913, 177.
The First International Exhibition in London, 1851, 205. Ottoman textile and clothing products at the Paris International Exhibition of 1855, 207. Ottoman textile and clothing products at the Second London International Exhibition of 1862, 209. Textile and clothing products at the Sergi-i Umum-i Osmani in Istanbul in 1863, 211. Sultan Aziz’s European tour in 1867 and the reflections of Western industrial innovations within the empire, 215.
1805: The first reflections of the Industrial Revolution in the Ottoman Empire—industrial establishments in Istanbul, 233. Feshane Fabrika-i Hümayunu, the cornerstone of the Turkish textile industry, 235. The İslimiye Broadcloth Factory, 250. Hereke Fabrika-i Hümayunu, holding a very special place among the historical sources of the Turkish textile industry, 253. Bakırköy Cloth Factory, 277.
Publisher: GSD Foreign Trade
Publication Date: 1996
Language: Turkish
Dimensions: 240 × 345 mm
Page Count: 283 pages