Papakha
Papakha (Armenian: փափախ; Azerbaijani: papaq; Georgian: ფაფახი, [pʰapʰaxi]; Chechen: холхазан куй; Russian: папа́ха; IPA: [pɐˈpaxə]), also known as astrakhan hat in English, is a wool hat worn by men throughout the Caucasus. The word papakha is of Turkic origin.[1][2][3][4]
The two Russian papakhas. One, called a papaha, is a high fur hat, usually made of karakul sheep skin. The hat has the general appearance of a cylinder with one open side, and is set upon the head in such a way as to have the brim touch the temples, some of them comes with ear flaps which can fold up when not using them and unfold them down when using. The other called a kubanka, which is the same as the papaha, except shorter, and with no ear flaps.
Papakh are very common in eastern Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh as well as other mountainous regions, where a man's hat is considered a very important part of his identity.[5] In Georgia, papakhi are also mostly worn in mountainous regions of Pshavi, Khevi, Mtiuleti, and Tusheti. Papaq are also very common in Azerbaijan.[6][7] Papakhi are also donned by the Chechens, Dagestanians, and other Caucasian tribes. In 1855, after the campaigns in the Caucasus Mountains, the Papakha was introduced in the Russian army as an official part of the uniform for the Cossacks, and later for the rest of the cavalry.
Russian and Soviet army uniforms
Shortly after the Russian Revolution of 1917, papakhas were removed from the new Red Army uniform because of their association with the old Tsarist regime and the fact that many Cossack regiments of the Tsarist army fought against the Bolsheviks. During the Russian Civil War, many Bolshevik cavalrymen and officers (like Vasily Chapayev) wore papakhas or kubankas because many of them were cossacks and the hat had been part of the cavalryman's uniform.
Papakhas became part of the uniform again in 1935, but in 1941, were reserved exclusively for full colonels, generals and marshals, thus becoming a symbol of status and high rank.
In 1994, they were once again removed from military use. Allegedly this was by request of the wearers, who found the hat inefficient. (As the papakha is a relatively short hat that does not protect the ears well, it might be well suited to the mild climate of the Caucasus, but not to lower temperatures. Also is not very wind-proof.) The act of removing the papakhas was seen in some quarters as an attempt of the Boris Yeltsin regime to abandon earlier Soviet traditions and symbolically demonstrate the country's commitment to a new political course. In 2005, papakhas were reinstated.
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Two Persian peasants wearing papakhas and two Persian officers gambling, between 1876 and 1933, Brooklyn Museum
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Leonid Brezhnev (right) wearing a papakh and Gerald Ford wearing an ushanka, 1974 in Vladivostok
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Armenian military commander Andranik wearing a papakh
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Vazha-Pshavela wearing Georgian papakha
See also
References
External links
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