In 1826, the Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II made a major decision. He had been working to modernise his empire, which by this time was being called 'the sick man of Europe' — falling behind the rapidly developing European powers in technology, military strength, and political organisation. He had abolished the Janissaries, the empire's old elite military corps. He was reshaping the army on European lines. Now he turned to clothing. He decreed that all soldiers and officials must wear a new kind of headgear: the fez, a tall cylindrical hat of red felt with a black silk tassel. The fez was new but not entirely new. It was based on traditional headgear from the Moroccan city of Fez, where dyers had been making red felt caps for centuries. The new Ottoman version was somewhat taller and more uniformly shaped. It was meant to look modern (no turbans, which were associated with the old Ottoman regime) while still being distinctively Ottoman (no European hats). Within a generation, the fez had become the standard hat across most of the Ottoman Empire. In Egypt — which was officially Ottoman territory but governed by the Muhammad Ali dynasty — it was called the tarboush. In Greece, where it had spread before independence, it was called the fesi. Across the Balkans, the Levant, North Africa, and parts of South Asia, the hat became the most recognisable symbol of the Ottoman world. Then, in 1925, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk — the founder of modern Turkey — banned the fez. He was modernising Turkey on European lines and saw the fez as a symbol of the old Ottoman past. Wearing one in Turkey could be punished with imprisonment. Some other Middle Eastern countries followed suit, discouraging the fez as old-fashioned. Egypt's King Farouk was overthrown in 1952; the new republican government discouraged the tarboush as too associated with the old monarchy. By the late 20th century, the fez had become a curiosity. It is still worn in Egypt today by older men, by some hotel doormen and waiters in traditional restaurants, and at certain festivals. It is worn in Morocco and parts of the Balkans. It has had unusual second lives in the West — Shriners (an American fraternal organisation) wear it as part of their regalia, certain religious figures wear it, comedians wear it. The hat that was once the symbol of an empire is now a piece of contested heritage. This lesson asks how the tarboush was made, why it was banned, and what its strange journey teaches us about how clothing carries political meaning.
Because clothing is never just clothing. It is also identity, status, and belonging. By making the fez compulsory for soldiers and officials, Mahmud was creating a visible symbol of his new modernised empire. Citizens of the empire could see, in any official they encountered, that the empire had changed. The same kind of state-mandated clothing has happened many times throughout history. The Manchu queue (long braided ponytail) was forced on Chinese men by the Qing dynasty in the 1640s as a symbol of submission. Russian Tsar Peter the Great forced his nobles to shave their beards in 1698 as part of westernisation. The French Revolution made certain clothing items politically charged (the red Phrygian cap as a symbol of liberty). Each was an attempt to use clothing to shape identity. The Ottoman fez was one of these attempts. It mostly worked. The fez became deeply associated with Ottoman identity within a few decades. It was a visible reminder, on every adult head, that this was the new Ottoman world. Students should see that 'official clothing' is a real political tool, used by governments throughout history to shape how people see themselves and each other.
Because demand was enormous. Millions of fezzes were needed each year for the soldiers and civilian populations of the Ottoman world. The economics of fez-making became significant. Cities competed to be the major supplier. Vienna in the late 1800s had several factories making fezzes specifically for export to the Ottoman Empire — a Habsburg city making the symbolic hat of the Ottoman Empire that was sometimes at war with the Habsburgs. The international supply chains were complicated. There is also a quality dimension. The best fezzes were prized; cheap fezzes were sniffed at. A wealthy Egyptian official might own several tarboushes of different qualities for different occasions. The makers competed on the precision of the shape, the depth of the red, the smoothness of the felt. Some makers became famous. The same kind of specialisation existed in many craft industries. Italian silk, Indian cotton, Chinese porcelain — all were major industries with prized makers. The tarboush was one of these. Students should see that 'national symbols' are also economic objects. Behind every important piece of clothing is an industry making it. The tarboush industry was substantial, international, and competitive.
Because the hat was a symbol. Atatürk understood that the fez stood for the old Ottoman world he wanted to leave behind. As long as Turkish men wore fezzes, they looked like Ottomans, identified as Ottomans, were Ottomans in their own minds. By banning the fez and requiring European hats, Atatürk was forcing a visible break with the past. Whether this was the right way to modernise is a real ongoing debate in Turkey to this day. Some Turks see Atatürk as the saviour of modern Turkey. Others see his clothing reforms as authoritarian and unnecessary. The point is that he understood clothing as politics. He was right that the fez carried meaning. He was right that changing what people wore would change how they thought of themselves. The same logic has been applied many times — the headscarf debates in modern France and Iran, the changing of military uniforms after revolutions, the requirement that schoolchildren wear specific clothing. Clothing is power, and governments throughout history have used it. Students should see that the Hat Law of 1925 was not eccentric — it was an example of a recurring pattern of state-mandated clothing change. The fez was a symbol; banning it was an attempt to change what Turks identified with.
Mixed. The tarboush is no longer the standard daily hat anywhere. But it is far from gone. It survives in specific traditional contexts, in fraternal regalia, in religious dress, in revival fashion. The pattern is similar to many traditional items of clothing that have been displaced by modernisation but not destroyed. The Scottish kilt is no longer daily wear but is worn at weddings and Highland Games. The Japanese kimono is mainly worn now at ceremonial occasions. The Indian dhoti has been displaced by trousers but continues for specific events. Each of these traditional items has its own continued life — diminished from peak use but real. The tarboush is one of these. It will probably continue to exist in this diminished form indefinitely — too historically meaningful to disappear entirely, too associated with old eras to come back as daily wear. Students should see that 'clothing change' is rarely complete. Old items often survive in specific niches, even when they have been actively suppressed. The tarboush survived even Atatürk's ban — outside Turkey. End the discovery here. The hat is still being made. The tassel is still being attached. The next tarboush is being prepared.
The tarboush — also called fez — is a tall cylindrical hat of deep red felt with a black silk tassel. Although the name comes from the Moroccan city of Fez, the modern form was promoted by Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II in 1826 as part of his modernisation reforms. He made it standard for soldiers and officials. Within a generation, it had become the standard adult male hat across the Ottoman Empire — from the Balkans to Egypt to Iraq. Different regions called it different names: fez in Turkey, tarboush in Egypt and the Levant, fesi in Greece. Major fez-making industries developed in cities like Tunis, Cairo, Vienna, and Strakonice in Bohemia. In 1925, the new Turkish republic under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk banned the fez as part of his westernising reforms. Wearing one in Turkey became a punishable offence. The hat largely disappeared from Turkey but continued in other Ottoman successor states. After Egypt's 1952 revolution overthrew King Farouk, the tarboush was discouraged there too as a symbol of the old monarchy. Today, the tarboush continues to be worn in Egypt (mainly by older men and in traditional contexts), Morocco, parts of the Balkans, by Shriners (an American fraternal organisation), and by some religious and fashion figures. It has had a strange afterlife — banned, mocked, revived, repurposed, but never quite extinguished.
| Date | Event | What changed |
|---|---|---|
| Centuries | Red felt caps made in Fez, Morocco | The basic technology and form develop in North Africa |
| 1826 | Sultan Mahmud II makes the fez compulsory for Ottoman soldiers and officials | The hat becomes a state-promoted symbol of the modernising empire |
| Late 1800s | Peak fez popularity across the Ottoman world | The hat is the most recognisable adult male headwear from the Balkans to Egypt |
| 1922 | End of the Ottoman Empire | Successor states emerge with different attitudes to Ottoman heritage |
| 1925 | Atatürk's Hat Law bans the fez in Turkey | Major rupture; the hat largely disappears from Turkish daily life |
| 1952 | Egyptian Revolution overthrows King Farouk | The new Egyptian republic discourages the tarboush as too royal |
| Today | The tarboush continues in specific contexts | Worn by older men in Egypt, by Shriners in the US, in heritage and fashion contexts |
The tarboush and the fez are different hats.
They are the same hat with different regional names. Fez is the Turkish and international name; tarboush is the Egyptian and Levantine name; fesi is Greek; fes is Bosnian and Albanian. Many other regional names exist.
Knowing they are the same hat helps students understand that this was a single Ottoman-wide phenomenon, not many separate traditions.
The fez is a very old traditional hat.
While red felt caps from Fez, Morocco, are old, the specific tall cylindrical form became dominant only after Sultan Mahmud II promoted it in 1826. The 'traditional' fez is therefore less than 200 years old in its modern form.
This challenges the assumption that 'traditional' means 'ancient'. Many traditional items are surprisingly recent.
The fez is a religious item.
The fez was promoted by Ottoman Muslim governments and was widely worn by Muslims, but it was not specifically religious. Greeks, Christians of the Levant, and others wore it too. It was an Ottoman imperial item, not an Islamic religious one.
The fez is sometimes confused with religious headcoverings. It is actually a state-promoted civic symbol that became associated with Ottoman cultural identity rather than with any specific religion.
The fez disappeared after Atatürk's ban.
It largely disappeared from Turkey but continued to be worn in Egypt, Morocco, the Balkans, and elsewhere. It has had unusual second lives in the West (Shriners, comedy) and is experiencing small revivals today. The hat is diminished but not gone.
'Disappeared' is a comfortable simple story. The reality is more complex — clothing changes are rarely complete.
Treat the tarboush with the historical seriousness it deserves. The hat is a real piece of Middle Eastern heritage with a complicated political history. Use both names — tarboush (Egyptian and Levantine) and fez (Turkish and international) — to help students see that this is a single phenomenon with regional variations. Pronounce 'tarboush' as roughly 'tar-BOOSH'; 'fez' as 'fez'. Be careful with the modernisation framing. Atatürk's reforms are still controversial in Turkey. Some Turks see him as a hero who saved Turkey; others see him as an authoritarian who suppressed traditional culture. The lesson should mention the ban factually without taking strong sides. Students from Turkey or with Turkish heritage may have strong family views; respect them. Be careful with religious framings. The fez was not specifically Islamic — Greek Christians, Levantine Christians, and others wore it. Avoid presenting the fez as 'Muslim dress' or its banning as 'anti-Muslim'; both framings oversimplify. Be aware that the fez has had complicated second lives. Some Black Muslim American organisations (Moorish Science Temple, Nation of Islam) wear it as a sign of Islamic identity; this is real and respectful. The Shriners' use is mostly disconnected from its origins; this is also real but different in character. The British comedian Tommy Cooper used it for comedy; this can be mentioned briefly without dwelling. Avoid the lazy 'exotic Orient' framing. The tarboush is from a real place with a real history, not vague exotic mystery. Egypt is a real modern country with about 110 million people; some students may have Egyptian heritage. Be respectful of contemporary Egypt. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The tarboush is still worn somewhere right now. The story continues.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the tarboush.
What is the tarboush, and what is its other name?
How did the tarboush become the standard hat of the Ottoman world?
Why did Atatürk ban the fez in Turkey in 1925?
Where is the tarboush still worn today?
What does the tarboush story teach us about clothing and politics?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
In your country, are there clothing items that have political meaning today?
Atatürk's Hat Law was enforced with police and even executions. Are there limits to how far a government should go to change what people wear?
The Shriners adopted the fez in the late 1800s, when American interest in the Middle East was high. They still wear it today, mostly disconnected from its origins. Is this respectful, neutral, or appropriative?
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