Type | Arab clothing |
---|---|
Material | Camel hair and Goat wool and for the wealthy pure gold thread |
Place of origin | Arabian Peninsula |
Introduced | 2300 BCE |
A bisht (Arabic: بِشْت; plural: بِشُوت bishūt and بْشُوت bshūt), known in some Arabic spoken dialects as mishlaḥ (Arabic: مِشْلَح) or ʿabāʾ (Arabic: عَبَاء), is a traditional men's cloak popular in the Arab world, and worn in general for thousands of years.[1][2]
According to ancient Christian and Hebrew paintings, a similar robe was worn in the days of Jesus by the people of the Levant.
The bisht is a flowing outer cloak worn over a thawb.
almukhtar
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).