Online Encyclopedia

TURBAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 411 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TURBAN  , the name of a particular

form of head-dress worn by men of
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Mahommedan races . The earlier forms of the word in
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English are turbant, turband, and tolibant or tulipant, the latter showing that variant of the
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original which survives in the name of the flower, the tulip . All these forms represent the French adaptation of the
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Turkish tulbend, a vulgarism for dulbend, from Persian dulband, a
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sash or
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scarf wound round the head . The Moslem turban is essentially a scarf of
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silk,
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fine
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linen, cotton or other material folded round the head, some-times, as in
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Egypt, round the tarbush or close-fitting felt cap; sometimes, as in
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Afghanistan, round a conical cap; or, as among certain races in India, round the
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skull-cap or kullah . Races, professions, degrees of rank, and the like vary in the style of turban worn; distinctions being made in
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size, methods of folding, and colour and the like (see INDIA: Costume) . At the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th century, a
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species of head-dress somewhat resembling the true turban in outward, form was worn by ladies of western nations, chiefly for use indoors .

End of Article: TURBAN
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BART SIR CHARLES TUPPER
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