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Medieval Islamic Clothing

Source: http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/islam/clothing/index.htm

Because the Islamic Empire occupied mostly hot places, people living in the Islamic Empire
mostly dressed to protect themselves from the sun. They didn't have any sunscreen then, so the
best way to keep from getting sunburns was to keep all your skin covered with cloth as much as
possible. At the same time, people also believed that God wanted them to be covered up,
especially women, so that men would not see their bodies. People said that women would be safer
if their bodies were hidden under layers of cloth.

So women in the Islamic Empire wore long, loose tunics, like T-shirts that reached down to your
knees, usually made of linen or cotton, and sometimes made of silk. Women also wore loose
pants under their tunics. And over their tunics, they wore veils, made of one large piece of cotton,
linen, or silk cloth, which they wrapped around them however was most convenient. But if they
were out in a crowd, or wanted to seem especially modest, they pulled the veil across their face so
no-one could see them. The veil was actually very useful not only for modesty and for keeping
the sun off your head, but also for a lot of other purposes: you always had a handkerchief
available, or you could use your veil as a baby sling, or a picnic tablecloth, or a bandage, or a
little tent, or a light blanket.

Islamic men generally dressed a lot the same as women. They also wore tunics, sometimes long
but generally only to their knees, and they also sometimes wore loose pants under their tunics.
Over the top they had a large piece of cloth, like the veil, but men would call it a cloak. It could
be used to keep off the sun or the rain, to keep you warm if it was cold in the desert at night, or as
a blanket or a tablecloth, or as a backpack, or to hide your face if you didn't want people to know
who you were. Or even as a baby sling sometimes. Often men also wore another, smaller piece of
cloth wrapped around their heads like a turban, to keep off the sun. There were a lot of different
ways to wind a turban, and each one showed something about who you were and what group of
people you belonged to.

It was in the Islamic period that silk first became a common fabric in Western Asia. During the
Roman and Sassanian Empires, only the Chinese knew how to make silk cloth, and if you wanted
to wear silk clothes you had to get a trader to bring them all the way from China. So they were
very expensive. About 650 AD, however, people in West Asia started a local silk industry. Soon
silk became much cheaper, and so more people wore it. And the traders of the Islamic empire did
good business selling the silk clothes to the people of France, England, Italy and Germany, where
mulberry trees would not grow because it was too cold.

Cotton, also, first came to West Asia from India during the Islamic Empire. And, like silk, for a
long time cotton was not produced in Europe, and instead the Arabs sold cotton cloth to
Europeans.

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