Warum scheint es so, als wäre Norwegen das einzige Land in den Nordischen, wenn nicht ganz Westeuropa, in dem traditionelle Kleidung in der allgemeinen Bevölkerung immer noch üblicherweise getragen wird? Ich weiß, dass es in den Niederlanden, Deutschland und Österreich bestimmte Regionen gibt, in denen immer noch traditionelle Kleidung getragen wird, und einige ältere Schweden besitzen auch eine Volkskleidung, aber Norwegen scheint das einzige Land zu sein, in dem es im ganzen Land unter Menschen jeden Alters üblich ist. Hat einer von Ihnen eine Idee, warum dies der Fall ist?

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    22 Kommentare

    1. Regularoldballoon on

      They’re not really traditional costumes. They’re inspired by rural traditions in some cases but these bunds have their origins in the early 1950s postwar national romanticism.

    2. Bavaria fits your criteria. Spend a day there and you’ll almost certainly see people in lederhosen and dirndl for no particular occasion.

    3. I love how your first example of bunad worn by „General population“ are royals xD

    4. Scotland have kilts which are still worn for weddings and other similar celebrations. You’ll see them worn on a regular basis up in the highlands

    5. It has become the ultimate garment/regalia for the annual May 17th celebration – our Constitution Day, which seemingly grows in popularity every year. Which means many are in possession of one, and will definitely use it for confirmations every April/May, maybe for weddings, and so on. Complete sets are quite expensive when all silver is acquired, and will often times be passed down, like my daughter will inherit my mother’s on her 15th birthday – and so the cycle continues.

    6. testing543210 on

      Orthodox Jewish communities in Brooklyn, New York still wear their traditional European clothing.

    7. TSSalamander on

      they’re not actually traditional and they’re only used for festive purposes.

      They’re an imitation of a tradition that existed, and as such their appearance is frozen in time. They’re part of Norwegian National Romanticism, and comes about during the 19th century, but only really take off post WW2.

      Still, they’re a statement about National pride and honor, and they do matter a lot. They’re a statement, saying „I am from X local place, a representation of my group, and i identify as part of norway“ because norway is a pluralistic nation with tons of dialects, histories, heritages, ect, none of which are surperior to another, nor more Norwegian than the other.

      There’s been a recent movement among Norwegian Diaspora minorities (Not Norwegians in Diaspora but Diaspora in norway) to create their own Bunad to symbolise the same statement but in their own way, legitimising their own integration. Every single indigenous Norwegian or otherwise assimilated Norwegian I’ve talked to seems to be a fan of this. Some Norwegians are indigenous, in that their bloodline so to speak is mainly decendant of inhabitants of norway in pre history, some Norwegians are assimilated Norwegians, having whole sale adopted the customs, dialects, and mannerisms of one Norwegian subgroup, while others still are intigrated Norwegians, part of a culture that now also considers itself Norwegian even if it hails from elsewhere. The push for Diaspora Bubads fits within the integration prospect.

    8. tons of countries in Europe have traditional clothings, official dates to use them and unofficial

      Include the other continents, its probably up on 60/40 if not way more counteies and local indevidual groups within the country

    9. Place_Work_Folk on

      In Scotland, kilts are very often worn on at weddings, funerals, graduations, christenings etc. Not all men have them but it’s very common.

    10. chadlightest on

      Well, the suit was developed in England towards the end of the 19th century. So technically, most British people wear traditional clothing and the rest of the world just wears ours. 🤷

    11. If you consider Austria western european, we definitely also still use traditional clothing for some occasions. (As do southern and northwestern parts of germany, sweden, switzerland etc.)

    12. WeatherExtension1345 on

      People don’t wear their bunads every day. Only on 17th May, and sometimes for others occuations.

    13. Praetorian_1975 on

      Emmmm Scotland would like a word, and probably also Germany (but only in October) 😂

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