Baidiequn (Chinese: 百迭裙), also known as Hundred-change skirt, refers to an ancient style of qun (Chinese: 裙; lit. 'skirt') worn by Han Chinese women in ancient China and is currently worn as a lower garment item in Hanfu. The baidiequn is typically a long, wrap-around densely pleated skirt with two flat surfaces at each end of the skirt. It started to be worn at least since the Song dynasty, where unearthed artifacts of what is now referred as baidiequn were found in the Tomb of Huang Sheng (黄升墓) of the Southern Song dynasty, Fuzhou, Fujian Province. It is also one of the two early Song dynasty prototypes of the mamianqun.
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