Kallawtah

The Kallawtah or kallaftah (كلوتة, kalloutah "bonnet") was a type of Turkic headgear worn during the Middle Ages in the Middle East.

It was semi-spherical, and generally worn by the military class without a turban around.

Another important headgear of the period was the sharbush.

[1] In Mamluk Egypt the kallawtah was originally prescribed to be yellow, but Sultan al-Ashraf Khalīl (r. 689–93/1290–93) had it changed to the color red, with the addition of a turban around it.

[1] Etymologically, the term is though to be at the origin of the word "Calotte", which is used from architecture to religious headware in western languages.

Kallawtah headgear worn by royal attendants at the court of Badr al-Din Lu'lu' . Kitab al-Aghani in 1217 CE