Danbooru
Login Posts Comments Notes Artists Tags Pools Wiki Forum More »
Search Changes Help
  • |
  • Posts (263) History

    Blacklisted (help)

    • guro
    • scat
    • furry -rating:g
    Disable all Re-enable all

    Recent Changes (all)

    • burp
    • canteen
    • girly boy
    • stellar blade
    • smegma
    • dream and dawn (shining nikki)
    • midnight tears (shining nikki)
    • apple balloon
    • magic hour (shining nikki)
    • rotom bike
    • rotomi
    • afternoon coffee (shining nikki)
    • tategami wolf
    • shinki yuu
    • hana reiko
    • amao ayumu
    • amao miru
    • kozeri ai
    • merpperoni
    • serperior
    • list of tamagotchi
    • 64 de hakken! tamagotchi
    • tamagotchi
    • merpperoni (vtuber)
    • list of touhou gensou eclipse costumes

    Options

    • Tag History
    • Post History
    • Wiki History
    • Discussions
    • What Links Here
    • Mistagged Posts
    • Untagged Posts

    mian guan

    冕冠

    A type of headwear designed for kings and emperors of ancient China, Japan, Korea and Vietnam. Characterized by a square lacquered board placed on top of the headgear, with strands of jade beads draping from the two ends, which represent the rank of the wearer.

    Originating in China, the mianguan was worn by the emperor, his ministers, and aristocrats. The mianguan was the most expensive Chinese headware, reserved for important sacrificial events. Regulations on its shape and its making were issued under the Eastern Han dynasty and applied in the succeeding dynasties only to be ended at the fall of the Ming dynasty in the 16th century AD.

    In Japan, emperors and nobles wore gold, silver, and gilt-bronze crowns, influenced by the Korean peninsula, from the Kofun period (mid 3rd century-7th century). In the 8th century, influenced by the Chinese mianguan, the unique benkan was born, a metal crown with chains and a sun-shaped ornament at the top. It is also worn in Vietnam, and the monarchs of the Joseon dynasty also wore an equivalent crown, the myeonlyugwan.

    External links

    • Photo (the Dingling Museum of the Ming Tombs)
    • A list of Guan, Jin, and other headwear

    See also

    • Tag Group:Attire

    The following tags are aliased to this tag: mianguan (learn more).

    This tag implicates guan_hat (learn more).

    Posts

    post #9473965
    post #9473178
    post #9462527
    post #9462492
    post #9445762
    post #9439526
    post #9439479
    post #9434568
    Terms / Privacy / Upgrade / Contact /