Jump to content

Kurkhars

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kurkhars
TypeHeaddress
MaterialRed felt or dense cloth
Place of originIngushetia

Kurkhars (Ingush: Курхарс) is the traditional female headdress of the Ingush. Its male counterpart is the Bashlyk. It was traditionally weekend clothing of the Ingush, worn during the holidays and for "going out". They are usually made of red felt or dense cloth and were originally made out of tanned and dyed bull scrotum. They are high caps in the form of a ridge with a forward curve and forked end.[1]

First mentioned in a 17th-century article list of Russian ambassadors describing their route through the Ingush lands to Georgia,[2] researchers consider Kurkhars, like the Bashlyk, in historical and cultural relationship with the ancient headdress of the Scythians and Phrygians, via the so-called "Phrygian cap", which was also most notably worn by the Persians, Thracians and Dacians.[3][4][5]

Archaeology

[edit]

A large collection of "kurkharses" were collected by archaeologists from a tower-shaped two-story crypt of the late Middle Ages in the village of Päling. The finds amazed scientists not only with their abundance, but also with their rich decoration, which used both local materials and very expensive imported fabrics (silk, semi-silk, satin, velvet, and brocade) of Iranian, Chinese, Egyptian, Syrian, Russian production. A kurkhars was made using gold and silver embroidery and using various materials: felt, leather, beads, beads, shells, and silver plaques. Techniques were also distinguished by originality and special elegance.[5]

In 2022, due to natural causes, one of the walls of the crypt of the tower complex Tsori in mountainous Ingushetia collapsed, where, among many valuable finds, archaeologists discovered 11 kurkharses in varying degrees of preservation.[6][7]

Kurkhars-headresses found Ingushetia

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dolgieva et al. 2013, pp. 170–171.
  2. ^ Genko 1930, p. 731.
  3. ^ Semyonov 1935, pp. 157–158.
  4. ^ Chakhkiev 1998, p. 64.
  5. ^ a b Semyonov 1959.
  6. ^ Танзила Дзаурова (9 November 2022). "Пять удивительных находок из склепа в Цори". Это Кавказ (in Russian). Retrieved 25 December 2024.
  7. ^ "В Ингушетии воссоздали уникальную технологию изготовления курхарса". Министерство культуры Республики Ингушетия (in Russian). 25 September 2023. Retrieved 25 December 2024.

Sources

[edit]