enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tapa cloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tapa_cloth

    [1] [2] [3] The cloth is also known by a number of local names, although the term tapa is international and understood throughout the islands that use the cloth. In Tonga, the same cloth is known as ngatu, and here it is of great social importance to the islanders, often being given as gifts. [4] In Samoa, it is called siapo, and in Niue it is ...

  3. Tunakaimanu Fielakepa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunakaimanu_Fielakepa

    Koloa, which translates as "value", is a term to describe textiles made by Tongan women.These take many forms, including ngatu, widely known in the Pacific as tapa cloth, which is made from bark and inscribed with intricate patterns and symbols; ta’ovala, which are mats woven from strips of pandanus leaves; and kafa, which is braided coconut fibre or, sometimes, human hair.

  4. Culture of Tonga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Tonga

    Tonga has evolved its own version of Western-style clothing, consisting of a long tupenu, or sarong, for women, and a short tupenu for men. Women cover the tupenu with a kofu , or Western-style dress; men top the tupenu either with a T-shirt, a Western casual shirt, or on formal occasions, a dress shirt and a suit coat.

  5. Taʻovala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taʻovala

    A taʻovala is an article of Tongan dress, a mat wrapped around the waist, worn by men and women, at all formal occasions, much like the tie for men in the Western culture. The ta'ovala is also commonly seen among the Fijian Lau Islands, and Wallis island, both regions once heavily influenced by Tongan hegemony and cultural diffusion.

  6. List of English words of Polynesian origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_of...

    Commonly used to refer to Tongan, Samoan and Niuean bark cloth (Ngatu/Hiapo/Siapo) which differs from Tapa in that it is thicker, produced differently with different materials, colorfully dyed and highly decorated with patterns and pictures. Tattoo a form of body modification using indelible inks. From Tahitian Tatau. Tiki Carving in humanoid form.

  7. Kiekie (clothing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiekie_(clothing)

    A kiekie is a Tongan dress, an ornamental girdle around the waist, mainly worn by women on semiformal occasions, but nowadays also sometimes by men. At highly formal occasions both gender will settle for a taʻovala. At casual occasions no girdle is needed for any gender, although women may continue wearing a kiekie even then, as it is ...

  8. Tongan narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongan_narrative

    Tongan narrative, Tongan mythology, or ancient Tongan religion, sometimes referred to as tala-ē-fonua (meaning, "telling of the land and its people") [1] in Tongan, is the collation of various myths, legends, stories, traditions, characters, creatures, spirits, and gods of the Polynesian islands that now make up the island nation of Tonga.

  9. Early history of Tonga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_history_of_Tonga

    [2] Another useful technology was their eponymous pottery with “dentate” impressions and simple designs that were characteristic of all Lapita settlements in the South Pacific. Tongan Lapita designs were simpler than western Lapita designs, evolving from ornate curvilinear and rectilinear patterns into simple rectilinear forms. [4]