Ming dynasty (1400s AD)
painting by Tang Yin
People in China generally wore tunics (like long t-shirts). Women wore long tunics down to the ground, with belts, and men wore shorter ones down to their knees. Sometimes they wore jackets over their tunics. In the winter, when it was cold, people wore padded jackets over their tunics, and sometimes pants under them. In early China, poor people made their clothes of hemp or ramie. Rich people wore silk.
Most people in China, both men and women, wore their hair
long. People said that you got your hair from your parents and so it was
disrespectful to cut it.
During the Sui Dynasty, in the 500s AD, the emperor
decided that all poor people had to wear blue or black clothes, and only rich
people could wear colors.
In the Sung Dynasty, about 1100 AD, a fashion started at the emperor's court
for women to bind their feet. Women thought that to be beautiful they needed
little tiny feet, only about three inches long. They got these tiny feet by
wrapping tight bandages around the feet of little girls, about five or six years
old.A shoe for someone with bound feet
Then in the Yuan Dynasty, the Mongols brought cotton to China. At first people didn’t want to grow cotton, maybe because the people running the silk industry wanted to keep people buying silk. But the Mongol invasions in the 1200’s destroyed a lot of the mulberry trees that were needed to make silk. The Mongol emperors, like Kublai Khan, turned to cotton to fill the gap. In 1289 AD they ordered the opening of special training centers to teach farmers how to grow cotton. And in 1296 they ordered that farmers who grew cotton could pay lower taxes. Soon everyone liked cotton better than ramie or hemp. Cotton was warmer, and softer, and stronger, and cheaper. You could make it thin for summer, or you could make thick padded clothes out of it that were warm for winter.