Though it’s named for the city of Fez, Morocco, the fez is a man’s hat that dates back to ancient Phoenicia. The Phoenicians were active traders and colonizers all over the Mediterranean, including in what is today Morocco, so it’s not surprising that the fez caught on there. What is remarkable is that it’s still worn today. Like all fashions, the fez has come and gone in different parts of the world. It disappeared from the eastern Mediterranean, where it originated, but was reintroduced centuries later. The fez caught on in the Balkans sometime around the Renaissance, possibly inspired by a kind of military cap resembling the fez that was common in the Mediterranean at the time. In 1826 the fez got a real boost when Sultan Mahmud II banned the turban throughout the Ottoman Empire. His thinking was that he wanted to modernize Turkey, and saw the turban as a symbol that separated east from west. “Modernization” in 19th century Turkey often meant “becoming more like Europ