The Pakol or Pakul (Khowar: پاکول, Shina: کھوئی, Persian: پکول , Pashto: پکول) is a soft, flat, rolled-up, round-topped men's cap, usually worn in eastern Afghanistan and northern Pakistan, as well as in the northernmost parts of India.[1] It is typically made of wool and found in a variety of earthy colours, such as brown, black, grey, ivory, or dyed red using walnut. The pakol is believed to have originated in Chitral and Gilgit.[2][3][4][5][6]
Saxena2015
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Sometimes referred to as the chitral hat, its origins can be traced to northwest Pakistan, where it was initially made by tribal women for shepherds.
Finally, Chitral's claim to the original ownership of the pakol is also supported by the fact that the place used to be at the center of the pakol's early "range of distribution", which at the beginning of the 20th century encompassed mainly Northern Swat, Gilgit, Hunza, and Nuristan.
The dress worn by most men consists of a black, brown, or grey homespun cap made in the shape of a bag and rolled up until it fits the skull.
In Chitral, Wakhan and Sirikol the men wear very small, scanty turbans. In Gilgit, Astor, and the greater part of Yaghestan the rolled woollen cap mentioned by Mr. Drew is commonly worn. In the Shin caste, unmarried women are distinguished by a white cap, which is never worn by married Shin women.