Bashlyk

Traditional headgear


title: "Bashlyk" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["military-equipment-of-russia", "military-uniforms", "military-history-of-russia", "russian-clothing", "turkish-words-and-phrases", "hoods-(headgear)", "clothing-of-the-ottoman-empire", "iranian-clothing", "achaemenid-empire", "pointed-hats"] description: "Traditional headgear" topic_path: "history" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bashlyk" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Traditional headgear ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/82/Kosta_XETAGUROV.jpg" caption="Ossetian]] poet [[Kosta Khetagurov]] wearing a bashlyk (white)"] ::

A bashlyk, also spelled bashlik, is a traditional Iranian, Caucasian, Turkic and Cossack cone-shaped hooded headdress, usually of leather, felt or wool, featuring a round topped bonnet with lappets for wrapping around the neck. Local versions determine the trim, which may consist of decorative cords, embroidery, jewelry, metallized strings, fur balls or tassels. Among dozens of versions are winter bashlyks worn atop regular headdress, cotton bashlyks, homeknitted bashlyks, silk bashlyks, scarf bashlyks, down bashlyks, dress bashlyks, jumpsuit-type bashlyks, etc. Bashlyks are used as traditional folk garment, and as uniform headdress.

A variation of bashlyk is the kalpak (qalpaq), a cone-shaped headdress without lappets, mostly made of leather, felt or wool, and the malahai, also known as the tymak, a curved cone-shaped headdress, either with or without lappets, mostly made of leather, and occasionally with a fur-wrapping, originally worn by most inhabitants of the Idel-Ural, but nowadays mostly reduced to the Bashkirs. It also went on to inspire the budenovka in the USSR.

History

Bashlyks became fashionable in Russia in 1830-1840, after the Napoleonic Wars with significant participation of the Bashkir cavalry. By the 1862 bashlyks were made a uniform headdress in Cossack armies, and later in other branches of Russian armed forces. The military bashlyk was bright yellow camel wool, with a yellow band. Officer bashlyks had gold or silver band. In the Russian army, bashlyks lasted till 1917, when they became a trademark of White Army officers and Red Army cavalry.

Gallery

File:Башкиры в Париже.jpg|19th century depiction of Bashkirs raiding Paris, all depicted wearing Bashlyks and Malahais File:COSSACKS PORTRAITS(1820) p025 (R) DON COSSACKS.jpg|A sketch of a Don Cossack with a bashlyk on, taken in Paris during the campaign of 1815 File:Казаки оренбургского войска.jpg|An 1839 drawing of Orenburg Cossacks wearing bashlyks (left) File:Джекцы (A).jpg|An 1865 photograph of Lezgins wearing Bashlyks and Kalpaks File:Заштатный.jpg|A 1871 sketch of an old man in a Bashlyk by Apollinary Vasnetsov

Notes

References

References

  1. [http://www.hatshapers.com/Hat%20Dictionary.htm Hat Dictionary]
  2. [http://etimology.net.ua/b.php Значение и этимология слов на букву Б] {{webarchive. link. (April 21, 2007)
  3. [https://www.m-w.com/dictionary/kalpak kalpak - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary]
  4. "ТСД2/Малахай — Викитека".
  5. Khostov, Mikhail (1996). The Russian Civil War (1): The Red Army. Bloomsbury, USA: Osprey Publishing. p. 23.
  6. (2007-03-12). "РУССКИЙ ВОЕННЫЙ МУНДИР XVIII-XIX веков".

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military-equipment-of-russiamilitary-uniformsmilitary-history-of-russiarussian-clothingturkish-words-and-phraseshoods-(headgear)clothing-of-the-ottoman-empireiranian-clothingachaemenid-empirepointed-hats