Cap was invented long ago in China.
For example, in Chinese idioms, there are "Yi Guan Chu Chu" (neatly
dressed both in clothes and in cap), and "Guan Mian Tang Huang (elegant
and stately in dressing)", and so on. The "Guan" and "Mian" here
refer to cap.
The code of wearing
caps was an important part in China's costume code: when a man reached the age
of 20, he began to wear cap, and on that occasion there was a ceremony called
"Guanli (Ceremony of the Cap)", indicating that he had grown
up.
The cap in ancient
China was not the same as the present-day one. It had only a narrow ridge
covering only part of the calvaria, not like today's cap that covers the whole
head.
After the cap came
into being, hierachical rule in terms of social status was applied to it: a poor
person with a low social status was not allowed to wear a cap. The rule on cap
wearing was different from dynasty to dynasty.
In the Han Dynasty
(206BC-220AD), the shape of the cap was already similar to that of today. Cap
must be matched with a headband. A lowly person could only wear a headband, and
a minor was only allowed to wear a hollow headband. The influence of such a rule
lasted until the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644).
In the Ming Dynasty, the Wushamao
(black gauze cap) appeared in the official uniform. "Mian" appeared
earlier than "Guan", and generally refers to "Mian" (crown)
specially used by the king. Only when the son of the emperor succeeded to the
throne could he be coronated (Jiamian, in Chinese, meaning offering the
crown). Laborers could only wear headband, mostly for wiping off the sweat, and
later it served as a cap.
Chinese caps have their own national
features. In ancient times, people of the Liao (916-1125) and Jin (1115-1234)
Dynasties usually wore fur caps, and people of the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368)
usually wore helmet-style caps and hats. Moreover, there were little colorful
cap of the Uygur, felt cap of the Tu, fox fur cap of the Mongolian, and so on.
In daily life, cap (hat) has also such functions as cold protection, warm
keeping, and decoration.