Fes
From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
English: A fes (also spelled fez) is a type of hat. It is named after the city in Morocco of the same name. It was formerly worn commonly in the Balkans and the Middle East. It is still worn in parts of north west Africa.
Français : Le fes (également orthographié fez) est un type de couvre-chef qui tient son nom de la ville du Maroc du même nom.
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Twelfth Night Costumers in New Orleans, two wearing fezes |
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Abdul Hamid II (1842-1918) |
Public demonstartion in Constantinople 1908 |
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Midhat Pasha (1822-1884) |
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Ali Pasha (1741-1822) |
Hussein Avni Pasha (1819-1876) |
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Mehemet Ali (Turkey) (1815-1871) |
Sultan Abdul-Aziz of the Ottoman Empire |
Abdul Hamid II, Sultan of the Turks, 1842-1918, ca. 1890 |
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Mehmed V, Ottoman Sultan |
Abdul Mejid, Ottoman Sultan |
French general Charles de Gaulle and Tunesian soldiers 1943 |
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Turkish general Omar Pasha (1806-1871) |
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Greek national costume with soft fes 1898 |