Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Siung
Traditional hat of Kadazan female in Sabah, Malaysia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Siung or Siyung (Kadazan Dusun: Siung do Papar) is a traditional lightweight headgear from Sabah, Malaysia, once commonly worn by the Kadazan females of the Papar District for protection against sunlight and rain during their agricultural activities.[1][3][4] In present days, the siung are more seen during the sazau or sumazau cultural performances and the harvest festival of the Kaamatan.[5]
Remove ads
Features
Summarize
Perspective
The siung is considered as the symbol of Papar Kadazans female that distinguished them from the Penampang Kadazans.[6][7][8] It is made of finely woven bamboo strips and rattan with a feather symbolising that the Kadazan sumandaks are still unmarried; the flower one means already married, while plain either means widowed, a grandmother or elderly.[9] Another hint is the silver belt (antique British trade dollar); unmarried Kadazan females usually have four, while those married wear only two.[9][10] The siung is paired with black velvety fabric of sia with gold weave designs and a belt called ikat pinggang and dastar headdress with the same fabric.[11]
- A Dusun woman[notes 1] (Kadazan woman) with a gong featured in a 1964 6¢ postage stamp of North Borneo (present-day Sabah) with a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II
- A Kadazan siung at the National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka Prefecture, Japan
- Sumazau performances by Papar Kadazans with siung at the Monsopiad Heritage Village
- Marcella Tiansim, the 3rd season winner of Miss Kadazan in 1962. Almost every Kadazan beauty pageant participant from Papar wore the siung
- A Kadazan man and woman during the Kaamatan celebration with the woman with a siung hat
Siung once featured in the sets of Malaysian stamps of RM1 in the year of 2006.[13]
Remove ads
See also
Notes
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads
