Delia

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Hetman Jan Zamoyski in a crimson delia and blue silk żupan. Right hand holds a hetman's buława.
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Hetman Jan Zamoyski in a crimson delia and blue silk żupan. Right hand holds a hetman's buława.
For the TV chef, see Delia Smith.
For the Italian commune, see Delia, Italy.

The delia was an item of male apparel worn over the żupan by szlachta (nobility) of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was usually of wool or velvet, finished with fur. The typical delia had short, loose, unsewn sleeves and metal buttons over the breast. Like most other items of male Polish national apparel, the delia was of eastern origin and the word itself came to Poland in the mid-16th century from Turkey.

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Gustav II Adolph of Sweden in Polish 'delia' coat, painting by Merian 1632
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Gustav II Adolph of Sweden in Polish 'delia' coat, painting by Merian 1632
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