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From Arabicمَنْدِيل(mandīl, “sash; turban cloth; handkerchief”), already borrowed before Islam from Byzantine Greekμανδίλιον(mandílion), μαντίλιον(mantílion), μανδήλη(mandḗlē, “cloth; hand towel; handkerchief; tablecloth”) (the last word found in an Egyptian papyrus dated to 481 AD), from Latinmantēlium, mantēle(“hand towel, napkin”), probably from manus(“hand”) + tergere(“to rub, wipe, wipe off; to clean”). Compare Frenchmendil(“turban, turban cloth”) (1659;[1] translating GermanMendil from a 1656 source).[2]
1634, Thomas Herbert, A Relation of Some Yeares Trauaile, Begunne Anno 1626. Into Afrique and the Greater Asia, especially the Territories of the Persian Monarchie: And some Parts of the Orientall Indies, and Iles Adiacent., London: Printed by William Stansby, and Iacob Bloome, →OCLC; republished as William Foster, editor, Travels in Persia 1627–1629. Abridged and Edited by Sir William Foster with an Introduction and Notes (Broadway Travellers), London: G Routledge & Sons, 1928, →OCLC, page 79:
His turban, or mandil [mandīl], was of finest white silk interwoven with gold, bestudded with pearl and carbuncles; [...]
MANDIL, the Name of a Cap or Turban wore by the Perſians. The Mandil is formed, by firſt wrapping round the Head a Piece of fine white Linen five or six Ells long; over this they wrap, in the ſame manner, a Piece of Silk of the ſame Length, and oftentimes of great Value. To make the Mandil genteel, Care muſt be taken, that in wrapping the Silk, it be ſo managed, as that the ſeveral Colours, found in the ſeveral Folds, make a kind of Waves, ſomewhat like what we see in marbled Paper.
1874, H H Cole, “Textile Fabrics”, in Catalogue of the Objects of Indian Art Exhibited in the South Kensington Museum, London: Printed by George E. Eyre and William Spottiswode, nd sold by Chapman & Hall,, →OCLC, page 243:
he Mandíl is used by officers in the army, and is a muslin turban with gold stripes, spots, and ends.
2015, Willem Floor, Edmund Herzig, editors, Iran and the World in the Safavid Age (International Library of Iranian Studies; 2), London, New York, N.Y.: I. B. Tauris & Co. Ltd. in association with the Iran Heritage Foundation, →ISBN, page 296:
Two inhabitants of the country on either side of the cartouche [of a map] represent the native population. On the left, a moustachioed nobleman, wearing a cloak and mandil (turban) grasps the cartouche with his right hand, and with his left holds up a bowl.
^ Adam Olearius with A von Wicquefort, transl. (1659) Relation du voyage d'Adam Olearius en Moscovie, Tartarie et Perse. Augmentee en cette novvelle edition de plus d'un tiers, & particulierement d'une seconde partie contenant le voyage de Jean Albert de Mandelslo aux Indes Orientales, 2nd edition, Paris: Jean Du Puis, →OCLC.
^ Adam Olearius (1656) Vermehrte newe Beschreibung der muscowitischen und persischen Reise so durch Gelegenheit einer holsteinischen Gesandschafft an den russischen Zaar und König in Persien geschehen, worinnen die Gelegenheit derer Orter und Länder durch welche die Reyse gangen als Liffland, Russland, Tartarien, Meden und Persien zu befinden, welche zum 2. Mahl herausgibt Adam Olearius, , Schleszwig: J. Holwein, →OCLC.