Men's wide multi-coloured silk belt, known as ttalapoulouzin, with tassels on the narrow sides. The name originates from Tripoli in Lebanon (Tarabulus/Trablus), whence it was imported to Cyprus. It consists of three panels, joined lengthwise. The belt is made of woven silk, with stripes and a chequered pattern in a similar arrangement on all three panels, especially on the two outer panels, which are nearly identical. The warp on one outer panel is in burgundy and orange colours, as seen from its extension into tassels, while the tassels that extend from the warp in the other outer panel are in black and burgundy colours. The warp of the central panel is in black and white and also extends into tassels. The colours on the two outer panels are burgundy, orange, light green, black, and white, with alternating colours creating stripes of different widths. On the back side of the panels, the colours and threads of the warp are more prominent. The colours on the central panel are black, orange, light green, white, and burgundy. They are the same as the outer panels but with a different arrangement and density, forming stripes and a chequered pattern.
The connections between the panels are made by hand with a chain stitch, using thick silk thread in a bright orange colour. The Cypriot collection of the National Historical Museum in Athens contains a similar two-panel ttalapoulouzin (Gangadi et al., 1999, 120). A three-panel sample is also preserved in the Aziz Damdelen Collection, which includes numerous photographs of Turkish Cypriots wearing ttalapoulouzin as part of their festive traditional attire, even into the early decades of the 20th century, and often in combination with European-style shirts and jackets (Rizopoulou-Egoumenidou and Damdelen, 2012, 244-245, no 118; see for example, photographs 004, 005, 007-009, 012, 013, 022). A similar belt, known as "tarapulous," was used in the Pontus region (Papantoniou, 1996, 108-109).
Dimensions: total width: 82 cm. (first-panel width 25 cm., central panel 29 cm., third panel 25 cm.)
Donation: Chr. Koutlidou