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The Khabarovsk Cossacks wore dark blue or grey-blue shirts with silver lace epaulettes, white breeches (patches on the knees) and high-topped boots. The Khabarovsk Cossacks wore a black felt cloak in bad weather and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front. After 1908, the Khabarovsk Cossacks retained their distinctive dress and with a black waistcoat replacing the conspicuous red one and without the silver ornaments or red facings of full dress.[14]
The Taman Cossacks wore (from 1884) a light grey-blue linen shirt, dark blue breeches and shiny black cavalry boots. A gold epaulette was worn on the right shoulder. The Taman Cossacks wore a black felt cloak in bad weather and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front.[15] The Ayan Cossacks (in 1907) wore a sky-blue cotton shirt and breeches and red leather boots with brass ornaments on the knee caps. A sky-blue felt cloak was worn in bad weather and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front.[16]
The Orenburg Cossacks (1908) wore a sky-blue shirt and breeches and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front. A sky-blue felt cloak was worn in bad weather and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front.[17] In 1914, the Cossacks wore a dark-blue shirt and breeches and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front. A sky-blue felt cloak was worn in bad weather and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front.[18]
The North Caucasus Cossacks (1907) wore a dark blue shirt and breeches and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front. A sky-blue felt cloak was worn in bad weather and a tall black fur hat with a white metal scroll on the front.[19]
All Kuban Cossacks are Orthodox Christians. In winter the Kuban Cossacks wear a long pinya over their traditional black tunic and a fur hat. One side of the pinya is fastened with a silver button and on the other are
The Kuban Cossacks also adopted the pinya but decorated it in much the same way as the Crimean Tatars. The braid was striped in yellow and red and the pinya was lined with black fur. The fur hats were white with a red braid on the brim and red buttons. The Terek Cossacks wore the pinya with white fur. They also wore high, pointed boots instead of the soft white leather boots. Officers were also required to wear a wide white belt with silver buckles. A white metal scroll was worn on the front of the fur hat. A whip was used instead of spurs.
The Crimean Tatars, dressed in a traditional pinya (long cloak and black fur hat) with the traditional white buttons worn on the front, but in peace-time without the tall fur hat. The pinya was embroidered with a square-shaped red braid in the middle, and a white braid along the edges and around the neck. The Tatars of the Caucasus, who were settled in the Crimea, wore black fur hats, but the Tatar of Crimea, who served with the Kuban Cossacks, wore a black felt hat with a red ribbon around its brim and a red braid. 827ec27edc