Wednesday 24 July 2013

Fashionable clothes for Men

Fashionable clothes for Men Biogarphy

Source(google.com.pk)
Carney was quick to address the issue this week. Just two days into the job, the Canadian said he understood the concerns about the loss of a female character on English banknotes and promised a final decision by the end of the month.
In a letter to the Conservative MP Mary Macleod, Carney said he had raised the issue with colleagues on Monday, his first day in the job. "I consider Sir Winston Churchill to be an excellent choice to appear on a banknote," he wrote. "However, I fully recognise that, with Sir Winston replacing Elizabeth Fry as the character on the £5 note – in the absence of any other changes to the Bank of England's notes – none of the four characters on our notes would be a woman. That is not the Bank's intention.
"I believe that our notes should celebrate the diversity of great British historical figures and their contributions in a wide range of fields."
King said in his final appearance as governor that it was "extremely unlikely that we will ever find ourselves with no women on our banknotes" and revealed that the author Jane Austen was being lined up as a possible figure for future notes
The earliest records of Gaelic dress come from a variety of Irish sources older than the AngloNorman invasion. These sources include early writings and heroic tales, carvings on ninth- and tenth-century stone crosses, figures on metal shrines, as well as marginal drawings in the famous Book of Kells. From these we learn that before the invasion of A.D. 1170, and probably for centuries earlier, two distinct forms of costume were worn by men: one was definitely aristocratic, while the other was in use among the ordinary people and fighting men.
(i) Chieftains and men of rank wore two main garments: a smock-like tunic known as leine (pronounced layna), long enough to reach the ankles unless drawn up through a belt. The leine was generally made of linen, but was occasionally of silk; it might be either white or dyed and was often decorated with a band of embroidery round the bottom hem. Over this was worn a large woollen cloak, or mantle, called a brat which had no sleeves and was shaped something like a bishop's cope. This mantle was usually a bright colour such as crimson, blue or green with a fringe round its edge, and was fastened on the breast with a metal brooch or pin.
(ii) The lower classes and ordinary fighting men wore a short and sometimes sleeveless jacket, with a shorter version of the mantle, and tight ' trews ' Gaelic triubhas (a word from which the English 'trousers' is derived) Trews were not unlike the medieval 'trunk hose' of Western Europe: when of full length they reached to the instep and were fastened by a strap beneath the sole of the foot but they were often much shorter, ending just below or even above the knee.
Women's dress, so far as our scanty evidence goes, seems to have consisted of a mantle like that of the men, worn over a leine which reached almost to the ground. While men usually went bare-headed with long hair, women probably wore a linen wrapping round the head as they did in later times.
Fashionable clothes for Men

Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men


Fashionable clothes for Men

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