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While the men are dressed in ordinary shirts, jackets and trousers, the girls and women of all ages wear the traditional costume known as üçbeş, which most sew and embroider themselves. The üçbeş consists of several garments worn one on top of the other. A complete üçbeş takes three months in all to make, at a cost of around 300 million Turkish lira (about 600 dollars). The women work at sewing and embroidery in their spare time from domestic chores and during the winter months when there is less outside work to be done. The üçbeş has further significance for girls, because they are regarded as reached marriageable age when they have acquired the skill to make an entire üçbeş costume without assistance from their elders. In Nebi it is not only the costumes that reflect the strong sense of Türkmen
tradition. The second stage is the engagement, when all the men and women of the village gather in the girl’s house. The fathers of the couple kneel down in front of the village elders and other guests and declare their son and daughter to be engaged. Then the bride-to-be kisses the hand of all the guests and stands waiting at one side while the guests are served with the sweet drink known as şerbet. Then it is time for the ceremony of exchanging gifts, the men giving money and the women articles of clothing.
The women dress up in their newest clothes in every colour of the rainbow and coloured bead jewellery, as if rivalling one another to produce the most dazzling effect. As elsewhere in Turkey weddings are the best opportunity for other unmarried young people to display their charms to prospective spouses. If the couple being married both come from Nebi then it is a chance to see traditional wedding celebrations at their most vibrant. The bride wears an üçbeş and veil she has made herself. If the bride is from another village and arrives in a white wedding dress, then she must change into an üçbeş before entering Nebi. The groom generally wears a suit, conceding to tradition by wearing a beaded headdress and a red shawl over his shoulders. The feasting and entertainments last for three days, ending when the bride is escorted to the house of her husband and gifts are exchanged. On the day after the nuptial night, the new husband is washed in the stream by his friends. When the wedding is finally over the inhabitants of Nebi, who have preserved the
Türkmen traditions they brought to Anatolia from Central Asia many centuries ago, return
to their daily routine until the next occasion. See also: Ottoman Wedding Dresses |
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