Qing Official Headwear

Qing Guanmao (清代官帽) is the headwear of officials during the Qing Dynasty in China. It consisted of (in winter) a black velvet cap, or (in summer) a hat woven in rattan or similar materials, both with a button on the top. The button or knob would become a finial during formal court ceremonies held by the Emperor. Officials would have to change their tops on the hat, for non-formal ceremonies or daily businesses. Red silk tassels extended down from the finial to cover the hat, and a large peacock feather (with one to three "eyes") could be attached to the back of the hat, should the merit of wearing it would have been granted by the Emperor.

The colour and shape of the finial depended on the wearer's grade. The royalty and nobility used various numbers of pearls. An officer of the first grade wore a translucent red ball (originally ruby); second grade, solid red ball (originally coral); third grade, translucent blue ball (originally sapphire); fourth grade, solid blue ball; fifth grade, translucent white ball (originally crystal); sixth grade, solid white ball (originally mother of pearl). Officers of the seventh to ninth grade wore gold or clear amber balls of varied designs.

The Qing officials also wore a mandarin square rank badge.

  • First Grade Bodyguards, Baturu Zhanyinbao wearing a Qing style headwear (Winter form)

  • Portrait of Prince Yine of Qing Dynasty wearing a Qing style headwear (Winter form)

  • Shen Baozhen, an Qing official wearing a a Qing style headwear (Summer form)

Famous quotes containing the words qing and/or official:

    There cannot be peaceful coexistence in the ideological realm. Peaceful coexistence corrupts.
    —Jiang Qing (1914–1991)

    I know one husband and wife who, whatever the official reasons given to the court for the break up of their marriage, were really divorced because the husband believed that nobody ought to read while he was talking and the wife that nobody ought to talk while she was reading.
    Vera Brittain (1893–1970)