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All East Asia

Qing Dynasty Jacket from China

Woman’s jacket, China, Qing dynasty, Jiaqing period (1796-1820), 18th century. Silk; satin weave, supplementary-warp pile, voided. 113 x 124 cm. The Textile Museum Collection 2007.13.1. Donated by Elizabeth Ickes.

The Jiaqing Emperor (1796-1820) ruled over China for 24 years as the seventh monarch of the Qing dynasty. He was not a popular figure, and his reign was marked by political and economic upheaval, including two rebellions and rampant piracy that stifled trade.  

This formal winter robe may have belonged to his second wife, the empress consort Xiaoherui. Fashioned from fine silk velvet, it features nine four-clawed dragons. In Qing-dynasty China, only the imperial family was allowed to wear yellow garments patterned with dragons. Five-clawed dragons were even more exclusive — restricted to the emperor, his sons or a ruling empress. Based on the style of the motifs, we can date this coat to the 1790s, when Jiaqing first came to power. 

More than a century later, another influential woman owned this coat. Jane Dahlman Ickes (1913-1952), second wife of Harold Ickes, Secretary of Interior to President Franklin Roosevelt, wore it often. The robe was altered for Ickes (or possibly the original fabric had never been tailored for wear): a Mandarin collar was added, the sleeves shortened and the front closure adjusted. Luckily, the pattern of mountains and waves at the hem was not cut off, just turned under.  

This coat is very rare — one of the only velvet dragon robes that survives today — and a fascinating vestige of two women who inhabited powerful levels of their societies.  

A drawing of a woman in an elaborate and colorful dress.
Portrait of Empress Xiaoherui by a court painter. Palace Museum.
A black and white photo of a couple in a field with a house in the background
Jane and Harold Ickes in the garden of the Ickes country home, June 33, 1938. Photo by Harris & Ewig. Library of Congress LC-H22-D-10060-X.
Researched by Peggy Greenwood

Peggy Greenwood has been a docent with the museum since 2007 after retiring from a 40-year career with the Department of Defense. Previously she served the museum for seven years as a program volunteer. She is also active in the Potomac Fiber Arts Guild and dabbles in knitting, weaving, experimental stitch, sewing and surface design.