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Image

Unknown Maker, Arabian Peninsula

Man's head cloth (keffiyeh)

Description

Maker

Unknown Maker, Arabian Peninsula

Culture

Arabian Peninsula, Saudi Arabian

Title

Man's head cloth (keffiyeh)

Year

1949

Medium

  • cotton; plain weave,
  • discontinuous supplementary weft patterning

Materials/Techniques

Techniques

  • cotton; plain weave,
  • discontinuous supplementary weft patterning

Materials

cotton

Credit / Object Number

Credit

Gift of the Estate of Theodore Francis Green

Object Number

69.138G

Type

  • Costume

Exhibition History

Exhibition History

Sartorial Sanctuary
Clothing and Traditions in the Eastern Islamic World
Dec 19, 2008 – Apr 26, 2009

Label copy

The custom of covering one’s head as a gesture of modesty and respect existed in the Arabian Peninsula and the Mediterranean well before the advent of Islam. During Muhammad’s lifetime, Arab men wore turbans, hats, caps, and head cloths (keffiyeh), often in combination with one another. Turbans, however, dominated until the mid-19th century, when the keffiyeh and head rope (agal) came into widespread popularity, evolving in the 20th century into badges of national identity in many countries of the Middle East. The checked pattern of the red-and-white cotton keffiyeh shown here is said to derive from ancient Mesopotamian symbols for wheat or fishing nets.

Men generally fold the square keffiyeh into a triangle, arranging the long edge over the forehead and leaving the points to fall at each shoulder and down the back. The agal, once a simple rope that doubled as a camel hobble among Arab Bedouin, now functions to hold the keffiyeh in place on the head. The gold and silk wrapped around strands of wool (originally camel hair) indicate wealth and elite status.

Related

Related

Unknown Maker, Arabian

Kofia
No Image Available

Unknown Maker, Arabian

Agal
No Image Available

Unknown Maker, Arabian

Man's head rope (agal)

More objects +

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Tombstone

Unknown Maker, Arabian Peninsula
Man's head cloth (keffiyeh), 1949
Cotton; plain weave, discontinuous supplementary weft patterning
Gift of the Estate of Theodore Francis Green 69.138G

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Feedback

We view our online collection as a living documents, and our records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you have additional information or have spotted an error, please send feedback to curatorial@risd.edu.

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