Men's clothing
the clothes for Egyptian men was a long skirt called the gallibaya. Tilke is also another skirt but it is a little different it is a very wide version of the galllibaya. The skirt length all depended on the time of fashion.
Most men wore wrap-round skirt that was tied at the waist with a belt sometimes the fabric was also wrapped around the legs.
While working the Egyptians would dress simple they would hitch up their skirt (the gallibaya) and rap it around their thighs.
Types of clothing. Trousers where named sserual they where sometimes worn with kaftan they where mostly strapped any way kaftan is a full length clothing kind of like a coat with wide sleeves it was open in the front and usually pulled together with a fabric belt called the hizan. Over the kaftan there was a binish a binish is a cloth over coat with wide sleeves usually slit bellow and is often dark gray and unlined. A djubeh, which has more, a difficult cut than mostly the Turks the ulama also wore a jubbah they also wore over the kaftan could wear the binish. The jubbah was long wide sleeved gown, which touched the ground or the feet mostly the feet, and the gown was buttoned half way down. Although from the 1800's the Egyptian dress was replaced by the European dress but nothing else was replaced.
Most men wore wrap-round skirt that was tied at the waist with a belt sometimes the fabric was also wrapped around the legs.
While working the Egyptians would dress simple they would hitch up their skirt (the gallibaya) and rap it around their thighs.
Types of clothing. Trousers where named sserual they where sometimes worn with kaftan they where mostly strapped any way kaftan is a full length clothing kind of like a coat with wide sleeves it was open in the front and usually pulled together with a fabric belt called the hizan. Over the kaftan there was a binish a binish is a cloth over coat with wide sleeves usually slit bellow and is often dark gray and unlined. A djubeh, which has more, a difficult cut than mostly the Turks the ulama also wore a jubbah they also wore over the kaftan could wear the binish. The jubbah was long wide sleeved gown, which touched the ground or the feet mostly the feet, and the gown was buttoned half way down. Although from the 1800's the Egyptian dress was replaced by the European dress but nothing else was replaced.