Ru (upper garment)

Ru, sometimes referred to as ' , ' , and  , is a form of traditional Chinese upper garment, or coat, or jacket, which typically has a right closure; however, they may also have a front central opening. It is traditional everyday wear for women of the Han Chinese ethnic group. It can be worn in combination with a skirt in a style called, or a pair of trousers in a style called.

The shape and structure of Chinese upper garments, generally referred as, varied depending on the time period. Garments that overlap and close to the right originated in China and are called. The style of which overlaps at the front and closes on the right in a y-shape is known as   and first appeared in the Shang dynasty. Since then the has been one of the major symbols of the Sino Kingdom and eventually spread throughout Asia. The structure of the jackets worn in the late Qing shared some features of those worn by the ethnic Han during the Ming dynasty. They continued to evolve and be worn in some form during the Republic of China. Since the 1930s, the popularity of traditional Han fashion declined in favor of the qipao and Western dress. It has regained prominence in the 21st century following the Hanfu movement.

The term  generally refers to clothing. In ancient times, the term referred to an upper outer garment. The term appeared in ancient texts to refer to upper garments, such as in the, in the Mao Commentary,  in the Analects, and in the I Ching.

/ / /
The term  has sometimes been used as a synonym word for the clothing items   and.

and
The can refer to both a long or short jacket. The also had different names depending on its characteristics, such as its length and the presence or absence of lining.

The, when referring to a short jacket,  can be found with either short or long sleeves. A short is also known as ' ;  a type of ' is the   which is waist-length. In the Mawangdui Silk Manuscripts, the character 《》refers to a 'short coat'. The ' also described the ' as being a form of ' (. It is also described as a common form of ' in the .

In the Han dynasty, the could be unlined, lined or padded. According to the ', a ' is a padded jacket, which is soft and warm; a   is described as being similar to a  which does not have cotton wadding.

There is also the term  which appear in texts and has been described as the precursor of the  by scholars. According to the ', however, the can also be a form of '. In the Zhou dynasty, a long was referred as the  while the  referred to ' with lining and which was similar to the ' in terms of form. According to the , a  is also a form of. Other forms of included the   which  and could reach the knee- or the hip-level.

Other terms, such as,  , and  , also exist.

According to the 《》written by Li Shizhen's time (1518 – 1593 AD), in ancient times, an unlined short garment, , was called  ; and in the time of Li Shizhen's time, the  also came to refer to long garments.

The term  typically refers to a form an undershirt. According to Li Shizhen, who quoted the 《》by Wang Rui, the used to called , an inner unlined garment; it changed name when the  of King Han was seeped with sweat when the latter fought with Xiang yu.

The term  appears in a Sui dynasty rime dictionary called, published in 601 AD and can be translated as "padded coat", but it can also refer to a lined upper garment. The term was sometimes used to refer to thicker forms of jacket which could be used as winter clothing. A, for example, was a lined jacket which was used by Han Chinese women as winter clothing; the  was typically worn on top of a long-length  underneath.

/
The term, sometimes pronounced  , also exists and is typically associated with the upper garment worn in military clothing called.

Collar designs
The is a form of jacket or coat, which typically closes to the right and is described as being. However, some styles can be found with a front central opening which can be referred as  or zhiling. The can also be classified as  when it is cross-collared closing on the right side,  when it has an overlapping big oblique lapel,  when it has a slanted, big lapel,   when it is squared collared, and  when it is round collared. It can also be found with or without a standing collar, which is referred as. The standing collars started to be incorporated in upper garments by the late Ming dynasty.

Bodice
The length of the bodice may vary; it can be waist-length or knee-length.

Slits can also be found at both sides of the lower hems of the bodice.

Sleeves
The length of the sleeves can vary in length, such as wrist-length and elbow length.

The shapes of the sleeves can also vary, such as big sleeves, narrow sleeves, large cuffs, mandarin sleeves, flared sleeves.

Symbol of Chinese civilization
Clothing style which overlaps and closes to the right originated in China. Chinese robes and jackets must cover the right part in a style called. The closure is an important symbol of the Han Chinese ethnicity. The  had been one of the major symbols of the Sino Kingdom, and eventually spread throughout Asia.

Composition of
The structure of the  may have some differences and variations in terms of features depending on time period and styles of upper garment. For example, a style of Ming dynasty have the following features:


 * 1) Left side of the garment;
 * 2) Right side of the garment;
 * 3) Xiu (袖) - Sleeves; it is composed of the side of the body and the mei; sleeves can come in various shapes and each shape has a specific name to describe it based on its shape;
 * 4) Mei (袂) - a panel of fabric attached to the left side of the garment, between the Ge (袼) and the Qu (袪);
 * 5) Ren (衽) - A side panel forming the chest part area; the left-side covers the right-side, youren (右衽);
 * 6) Jin (襟) - lapel (can be found on both sides; the right lapel is hidden);
 * 7) Qu (袪) - Sleeves cuffs for the wrists; can be narrow or loose;
 * 8) Ge (袼) - Sleeve root, the part where the sleeve is attached to the body of the garment;
 * 9) Lacing/ribbons - used to tied and closed the garment;
 * 10) Du (裻) - Middle seam of the clothes; it is where the Ren is sewed to side of the garment; there is also a middle seam at the back of the garments which joins the back of the left and right side of the garment called Zhongfeng (中缝);
 * 11) Huling (护领)- a collar guard, it is shorter than the actual collar and is used to prevent the collar from getting dirty or wear off.

Chinese-barbarian dichotomy
The traditional way to distinguish between and  is by looking at the direction of the collar. In Ancient China, some ethnic minorities had clothing which generally closed on the left side in a way referred as. This can be found in the Analects where Confucius himself praised Guan Zhong for preventing the weakened Zhou dynasty from becoming barbarians: "'But for Guan Zhong, we should now be wearing our hair unbound, and the lapels of our coats buttoning on the left side [微管仲，吾其被髮左衽矣]'" Unbound hair and coats which were closed on the left side were associated with the clothing customs of the northern nomadic ethnic groups which were considered as barbarians by the Han Chinese. Therefore, the were used to refer to  and/or refer to the rule of foreign nationalities.

Exceptions
However, the rule was not always respected: for example, in some areas (such as Northern Hebei) in the 10th century, some ethnic Han Chinese could also be found wearing  clothing. It was also common for the Han Chinese women to adopt under the reign of foreign nationalities, such as in the Yuan dynasty; the use of  also continued in some areas of the Ming dynasty despite being Han-Chinese ruled dynasty, which is an atypical feature. Some non-Chinese ethnicities who also adopted -style sometimes maintain their lapels, such as the Khitans in the Liao dynasty.

Funeral practices
The only moment Han Chinese is supposed to use is when they dressed their deceased. This is due to ancient Chinese beliefs in the Yin and Yang theory, where it is believed that the left is the aspect and stands for life whereas the right is the  which stands for death. Based on this belief, the left lapel needs to be outside (i.e. -style) to indicate that the power of is suppressing the, which therefore symbolized the clothing of living people. However, if surpasses  (i.e. -style), then clothing becomes the clothing worn by the deceased. It is therefore typically taboo in Chinese clothing for a living person to wear.

History
Clothing style with  closure originated in China. Prior to the Eastern Han, the was the most common form of short robe for both men and women; however, the  was preferred by women afterwards. The long could reach the knee-level whereas the short ru was waist-length. The could be found unlined, lined or padded.

Shang dynasty
The  started to be worn in the Shang dynasty. According to historical documents and archaeological findings, the basic form of clothing during Shang was.

In the Shang dynasty, the was long reaching the knee-level and would be worn over a skirt called ;  the  worn by slaveholders had tight sleeves and were also closed on the right side following the -style.

Zhou dynasty
In the Zhou dynasty, there were various forms of as a generic term of upper garments. A typical form of was the. The had different names in this period depending on its characteristics such as length and lining:  referred to the long-length ;   referred to the short-length ;  referred to the  with a lining and was therefore suitable to protect its wearer from the cold in winter if it was filled with silk or flax; the  was similar to the  in form.

Han dynasty and Three Kingdom period
In the Han dynasty, short waist-length could be worn with trousers or skirts by men and women respectively.

In the Han and Wei dynasties, the sleeves of the could be wide or narrow; the  was closed to the right. A form of which appeared in the Han and Wei period was a new type of gown which had equal front pieces which were straight instead of being  and was fastened with a string; it was also a form of unlined upper garment with straight sleeves and wide cuffs. This was worn by men and women and became popular as it was more convenient for wearing.

Tang dynasty
The, , and were common garment items for women in the Tang dynasty. The (as a short jacket) and  (as an unlined short robe) were used for ceremonial and daily clothing by women. Some jackets in Tang dynasty could be found with narrow sleeves, while other upper garments could be found with loose sleeves. The Tang dynasty could also be a tight jacket or a cotton-padded jacket, which could have embroidered golden line as embellishment at the collar and sleeves or could sometimes be decorated with silk damask. were also worn by women in this period; a form of  was the  which became popular when the -style declined in popularity.

Song dynasty
In the Song dynasty, the (shirt with large/broad sleeves) was a form of fashionable formal clothing. Song dynasty, women wore jackets and  jackets. The short ru was a daily garment item for women; the closures of the short ru were found either on the left or right of the front of the garment.

Clothing worn by the Northern Song dynasty people living in Kaifeng are depicted in the on the painting Qingming Festival on the River by Zhang Zeduan. This painting depicts the clothing worn by people holding different social status, ranks, and occupation: the jackets worn as outer garments were all short, about knee-length or shorter, when worn by coolies, pedlars, peasants, and boat people and children who peddled dried fruits wore short white shan.

Liao dynasty
Song dynasty-style fashion, including jackets, continued to be worn by both Han Chinese and non-elite Khitan women in the Liao dynasty; these jackets were waist-length.

Yuan dynasty
Both the and the  jackets for women coexisted in the Yuan dynasty. The wearing of (instead of ) was common in the Yuan dynasty. Han Chinese women also wore, a form of lined jacket, typically over a long-length  underneath as winter clothing.

Ming dynasty
Following the end of the Yuan dynasty, the wearing of in women's clothing persisted in the Ming dynasty for at least Chinese women who lived in the province of Shanxi. Ming dynasty portrait paintings showing Chinese women dressing in jackets appeared to be characteristic of ancestral portraits from the province of Shanxi and most likely in the areas neighbouring the province.

In the Ming dynasty, the as a long jacket became more prevalent at the expense of the short. According to the Discourse of Northern Learning (Pukhak ŭi; 北學議: 완역정본) by Pak Chega (1750–1805) who visited the Qing dynasty in 1778, in the Ming dynasty, Chinese women's upper garment barely covered the waist during the Hongzhi era (1488–1505); their upper garments then gradually became longer and reached below the knee-level during the Zhengde era (1506–1521). Pak Chega based his description of Chinese women's clothing by using the Records of Daily Study (Rizhilu) by Gu Yanwu (1613–1682), a scholar from the late Ming and early Qing dynasties.

Qing dynasty
As Han women were not forced to change into Manchu clothing in the Qing dynasty, Han women of the Qing dynasty followed the style of female jacket worn in the Ming dynasty. The Han Chinese women carefully maintained their pure Han Chinese ethnicity and did not wear Manchu clothing. Over time, the Ming dynasty customs were gradually forgotten. The clothing of the Han and the Manchu eventually influenced each other. However, Manchu women and Han Chinese women never emulated each other's clothing; and as a result, by the end of the nineteenth century, Manchu and Han Chinese women had maintained distinctive clothing.

In the early Qing, Han women continued wearing Ming dynasty hanfu; in the South, the jiaoling ao and shan continued to be worn with long skirts by most women while in the North, trousers were more common.

In the mid-Qing clothing, fashionable styles were associated to those worn in the late 16th and early 17th century. According to the Discourse of Northern Learning (Pukhak ŭi; 北學議: 완역정본) by Pak Chega (1750–1805) who visited the Qing dynasty in 1778, Chinese women wore upper and lower garments which were similar to those worn in ancient paintings. Pak described the jackets had collars which were round and narrow and were fastened just below the chin; he also described them as being typically long enough to conceal the entire body although in some cases, the jacket would be long enough to be just below the knee-level. Pak also observed that the Chinese women's clothing preserved the old traditions (which were mostly intact) and which he contrasted with the Joseon women's clothing trend which he claimed to be taking more after Mongolian in style, an influence which he attributed to the close relationship between Goryeo and the Yuan dynasty and continued to exist in Joseon during his lifetime.

After the Mid-Qing dynasty, Manchu clothing, called qizhuang, started to influence the women's hanfu. In the late 18th and 19th century, there was a dramatic shift in fashion aesthetics. New silhouettes were recorded in various pictorial and written sources, which were different from those worn in the Ming dynasty (i.e. loose and long layered jackets and skirts which were more unstructured ), with the appearance of wider and more structured forms of Han Chinese women's jackets (including, , and ). The trend in this period was characterized on the emphasis on decorative trims and accessories which were modular and could be easily produced, purchased and then applied on the clothing (including robes, jackets, and skirts); those forms of modular features included collars, sleeve-bands and border decorations. The borders decoration in contrasting colours were used throughout the clothing history of China and were recorded early on in history (e.g. in the Liji). During this period, auspicious symbols and narrative scenery were especially made into embroidered roundels and borders and became fashionable in Han Chinese women's clothing; this new trend was an influence of the late imperial secularization of arts and culture on textiles. They were also lavished with embroideries which were based on the Chinese symbolic system, which was itself based on Chinese language, mythology, customs, and literature, and belief system (e.g. Confucianist and Taoist motifs). The wide sleeves used in the upper garment were a heritage of the Ming dynasty and a distinctive feature which differentiated Hanfu from Manchu clothing. In terms of length, the long jacket was about below the hip level or at the knee level but were never as long as the Manchu robes, it was however longer than the waist-length jacket  which appeared to have fallen from popularity during the 18th century.

The  continued to be worn. In the late Qing, these had neither darts nor shoulder stitching; the front and back panels are connected by the shoulder, and the left and right pieces are more or less symmetrical. It has a front centre closure and then curves crossover to the right before secured with frog buttons in a style called. The front closing, collar, hem, and sleeves cuff have edging of contrasting pipings and side slits. The jackets could also be decorated with appliqué.

Republic of China
In the early Republic of China, the were found with narrow sleeves; the length of the sleeves could be found wrist-length, and higher standing collar (e.g. saddle/ingot collar or ear-length collar). These high collars were gradually lowered. After the May 4th Movement, these high collars were abandoned due to their inconvenience. In the 1920s, the jackets had curved lower hem at the waist-hip region and low standing collar; it was a component of the ). After the 1930s, these forms of upper garments lost popularity and decreased in use, as they were replaced by qipao and Western dress.

21st century
Following the Hanfu movement in 2003, many various forms, shapes, and styles of Hanfu upper garments have reappeared and regained popularity.

East Asia
The closure was adopted by the Japanese in 718 through the Yoro Code which stipulated that all robes had to be closed from the left to the right in a typical Chinese way The closure was also adopted by the Koreans during the Three Kingdoms period who changed the closure of their jeogori from left to right by imitating Chinese jackets; the right closure is a feature which still exists in present-days hanbok. Initially, the jeogori closed at the front, then switched to a left closure before eventually closing to the right side. Closing the jeogori to the right has become standard practice since the sixth century AD. King Hyonjong of Goryeo had been said to have composed a poem in 1018 stating, "Had it not been for Kang, evermore would our coats on the left be bound", when Kang Kamch'an won against the invading Khitan. The Chinese Ming dynasty also bestowed the ceremonial attire and daily clothing to the Joseon queens from the reign of King Munjong to the reign of King Seonjo whenever a new king was enthroned; the bestowed clothing included (襖, called o in Korea), qun (裙, called gun in Korean), and dansam (unlined jacket).

The Vietnamese used to wear the áo giao lĩnh (cross-collared robe) which were identical to those worn by Han Chinese people before adopting the áo ngũ thân ), a loose-fitting shirt with a stand-up collar and a diagonal right side closure which run from the neck to the armpit and trousers.  The standing-up collar and diagonal right closure are two features inspired by Chinese and Manchu clothing.  The change in upper garment style along with the adoption of Chinese-style trousers was decreed by the Nguyễn lords who ruled the south region of Vietnam and who wanted to differentiate their people from those living in the north and were ruled by the Trịnh lords.

America and Europe
British fashion had incorporated key elements from the construction design of Chinese clothing, including the use of wide sleeves and side closure; these designs were then adapted to meet the aesthetic tastes of Europeans. The design of wrap-style closure or neckline, known as  in China, in European garments was the results of the heavy influences of Orientalism which was popular in the 19th century. Chinese also influenced various designs and styles of in the United States. Chinese jackets with wrap closure also influenced American fashion in the early 1900s; an example of such jacket is the (#4777), which appeared in American women's magazine, The Delineator, in 1901. In volume 57, The Delineator described it as being "Ladies' Chinese dressing", and as having "a strong suggestion of the Orient". The was designed to be loose-fitting, a wrap closure on the left side (known as  in China) which closes with satin ribbon ties; it also featured deep side vents, which was considered as being a "novel effect", and was trimmed with a single band creating a fancy outline. The of Volume 57 (#4777) reappeared in Volume 58 of The Delineator along with another Chinese-style inspired wrap top (#3920), one of which closed on the right side (known as  in China) with a single ribbon. The Ladies' Chinese dressing sac #3920 appeared at least a year earlier and was published in Volume 56 of The Delineator of 1900. Likewise, Japanese Kimono-style with wrap closure, also influenced American summer fashion in the early 1900s; these became known as Misses' or girls' Japanese wrapper or lounging-robe. There are also photographic evidences of Chinese robes being used outside its wearer's home as fashion items with little or no adaption from the 1920s. The loosening of women's fashion found in the 1920s loose-fitting fashion, especially the disappearance of nipped-in corset, appears to have also been influenced by the loose lines and roomy armholes of the traditional Chinese robes and jackets along with other factors, such as the experience of freedoms of elite women at that time, the sportswear-designs of Chanel, and the garment designs by Paul Poiret who designed Middle-Eastern inspired garments.

Usage

 * Shanku
 * Ruqun