The Manchu ethnic
minority is mostly distributed in Northeast China's Heilongjiang, Jilin and
Liaoning Provinces, especially in Liaoning Province. The Manchu have their own
language and letters. They are fond of singing and dancing from of old, and
their ancient songs and dances mostly evolved from activities of hunting and
battle.
Qixie (Manchu shoes):
ancestors of the Manchu had a convention of "making shoes out of wood". By the
early Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), their shoes had developed into the high-heeled
female shoes of wooden treads: those in the shape of a flowerpot were called
"flowerpot shoes", and those in shape of a horse's hoof were called "horse
hoof-tread" shoes.
The Manchu shoes for
aged women had a piece of flat wood as the tread, called "flat-tread shoes ".
Usually, there were colorized brims or bead string patterns on both the upper
and the vamp. The Manchu had a custom of females wearing Qixie (Manchu
shoes) and males wearing boots. Officials wore square-toed boots, and commoners
wore pointed-toed boots. Materials of the boots include satin, woven silks,
cloth and leather, etc.
Among the Manchu
civilians, men liked to wear Wulaxie: a kind of shoes made of animal skin
and wadded with Wulacao (a soft grass growing in northeast China), which
is very light and warm and suitable for hunting and running on the ice in
winter.
Dingdai Hualing was a kind of
hat used to indicate one's official rank in the Qing Dynasty. Dingdai,
commonly called "Dingzi", was decorated with colorful gemstones and gold
to show the official rank, and on it were some inserted plumes, hence the name
"Dingdai Hualing". Such a convention of adornment was a relic of the
ancient custom of wearing stones and plumes of the Nuchen people (ancestors of
the Manchu).
The Manchu people,
whether male or female, old or young, have the habit of wearing a cap in all
seasons. Men wear a hat or an umbrella-shaped grass cap in spring and summer,
and a warm cap, especially a fur felt hat, in autumn and winter. For women, they
like to wear a cool cap or a flat-bottomed cap in ordinary life. Aged women in
winter wear "Erbao" (ear covers) or "Naobao" (head covers),
etc.
The Manchu respect the
dog, so it is prohibited to wear caps and raglan sleeves made of
dogskin.