First of all, briefly introduce Beipu girl.
Miss Liaopu is one of the three major fishermen in China, and also the name of Liaopu Village in Quanzhou, Fujian. Legend has it that they are descendants of ancient Arabs, and they still keep the custom of wearing hairpin flowers on their heads.
The female custom of starting a prairie fire is one of the intangible cultural heritages of the country. Liaobu retains many traditional customs in southern Fujian, including unique wedding customs, Chinese New Year customs, festive customs and sacrificial ceremonies, among which the wedding customs of "getting married in the middle of the night" and the sacrificial ceremony of "Mazu patrolling incense" are the most prominent.
Early girls in Beipu have long hair since childhood. When they were eleven or twelve years old, they put their hair on the back of the head, tied it with red rope and combed it into a bun, then put on a "bone bun" and strung it into garlands with buds or buds, ranging from one or two rings to four or five rings, and then wrapped it around the back of the head with the bun as the center.
Then, around the center of the bun, several bright red and pink Zanhua, silk flower or flowers are symmetrically inserted, and then two-legged hairpins or combs made of gold or silver are inserted. The whole head is dressed like a small flower bed full of spring, beautiful and fragrant.
Second, Liaopu village
Jipu Village, Fengze District, Quanzhou City, Fujian Province has a history of thousands of years. During the Song and Yuan Dynasties, it was the seat of Yong Er Port, which was called the largest port in the East, and numerous ocean-going merchant ships set out from here.
Beipu people "eat the sea by the sea, and the sea is a field", and their husbands go fishing or ocean-going trade for days or months. Whether in winter and summer or at low tide, women in Beipu will carry fish baskets, roll up their trousers and walk barefoot in the "oyster plant" to cultivate oysters and sea otters.
For a long time, Jiupu women have shown the style of Minnan women who are hardworking, enterprising, filial to the elderly and virtuous. Xunpu women's clothing is unique and unique. They are dressed in brown clothes and black trousers, with their hair tied behind their heads, tied into a bun, strung flowers into a wreath, commonly known as "hairpin wreath", and wrapped their hair sticks around the bun with an ivory chopstick in the middle. They went to Quanzhou to sell seafood along the street.