enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. National costumes of Poland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_costumes_of_Poland

    National costumes of Poland (Polish: stroje ludowe) vary by region. They are typically not worn in daily life but at folk festivals, folk weddings, religious holidays, harvest festivals and other special occasions. [1] The costumes may reflect region and sometimes social or marital status. [1]

  3. Folk costumes of Podhale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folk_costumes_of_Podhale

    Folk costumes from Podhale region - costumes wear by Highlanders in Polish area of the Tatra Mountains, Podhale region. [1] Unlike other regional groups in Poland, Highlanders from Podhale wear traditional outfit (or its elements) on a daily basis. This type of outfit is widely considered one of the Polish national costumes. [2]

  4. Cieszyn Vlachs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cieszyn_Vlachs

    Approximate extent of Cieszyn Vlachs within Cieszyn Silesia. The Cieszyn Vlachs (Polish: Wałasi cieszyńscy, Czech: Těšínští Valaši) are a Silesian ethnographic group living around the towns of Cieszyn and Skoczów, [1] one of the four major ethnographic groups in Cieszyn Silesia, the one mostly associated with wearing Cieszyn folk costume [1] but not the only one speaking Cieszyn ...

  5. Cieszyn folk costume - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cieszyn_folk_costume

    The female folk costume featured the lush and elegance, due to its essential element, silver jewellery. In the 18th and 19th century, women in Cieszyn wore splendorous clothes which consisted of a lace cap, covered with headgear, a short shirt (kabotek), redbreas, [check spelling] padded corset (żywotek), sewn at the waist, apron, white stockings and black shoes.

  6. Krakowiak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krakowiak

    The Krakowiak or Cracovienne is a fast, syncopated Polish folk dance in duple time from the region of Kraków and Lesser Poland. [1] The folk outfit worn for the dance has become the national costume of Poland, most notably, the rogatywka peaked hat with peacock feathers.

  7. Cracovians (ethnic group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cracovians_(ethnic_group)

    Cracovians (Polish: Krakowiacy) are an ethnographic subgroup of the Polish nation, who resides in the historic region of Lesser Poland around the city of Kraków. They use their own dialect, which belongs to the Lesser Polish dialect cluster of the Polish language, and are mostly Roman Catholic. Traditional Cracovian folk costumes (stroj ...

  8. Kurpie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurpie

    A Kurpie house. Note the thatched roof. Kurpie (Polish pronunciation:) is one of a number of ethnic regions in Poland, noted for its unique traditional customs, such as its own types of traditional costume, traditional dance and distinctive type of architecture and livelihoods.

  9. Żupan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Żupan

    Polish magnate Jan Zamoyski (1542-1605) dressed in a crimson delia over a blue silk żupan, and tied with a pas kontuszowy.The right hand holds a buława.. Żupan (Polish pronunciation:; Lithuanian: žiponas, Czech: župan, Slovak: župan, Hungarian: kabát, Belarusian: жупан, Ukrainian: жупан) is a long lined garment of West or Central Asian origin which was widely worn by male ...