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  2. Toga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toga

    Some scholars believe this shows a toga picta, largely based on its colour and decorative detail; others suggest that the straight edges make it a Greek-style cloak, and not a toga. [25] Togas were relatively uniform in pattern and style but varied significantly in the quality and quantity of their fabric, and the marks of higher rank or office.

  3. Clothing in ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothing_in_ancient_Rome

    For boys, the amulet was a bulla, worn around the neck; the equivalent for girls seems to have been a crescent-shaped lunula, though this makes only rare appearances in Roman art. The toga praetexta, [33] which was thought to offer similar apotropaic protection, was formal wear for freeborn boys until puberty, when they gave their toga ...

  4. Stola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stola

    It has long been believed that Roman women originally did not wear stolae and that they instead wore togas like the men. However, this goes back to a scholarly lore invented in Late Antiquity. [9] [10] For the most part, the toga was worn exclusively by men, and Roman wives (matronae) traditionally wore the stola.

  5. Clothing in ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothing_in_ancient_Greece

    Small fragments of textiles have been found from this period at archeological sites across Greece. [9] [page needed] These found textiles, along with literary descriptions, artistic depictions, modern ethnography, and experimental archaeology, have led to a greater understanding of ancient Greek textiles.

  6. Clothing in the ancient world - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothing_in_the_ancient_world

    The toga pulla was dark-colored and worn for mourning, while the toga purpurea, of purple-dyed wool, was worn in times of triumph and by the Roman emperor. After the transition of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire in c. 44 BC, only men who were citizens of Rome wore the toga. Women, slaves, foreigners, and others who were not citizens of ...

  7. Roman triumph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_triumph

    Like much in Roman culture, elements of the triumph were based on Etruscan and Greek precursors; in particular, the purple, embroidered toga picta worn by the triumphal general was thought to be derived from the royal toga of Rome's Etruscan kings. For triumphs of the Roman regal era, the surviving Imperial Fasti Triumphales are incomplete.

  8. Byzantine dress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantine_dress

    The distinctive garments of the Emperors (often there were two at a time) and Empresses were the crown and the heavily jewelled Imperial loros or pallium, that developed from the trabea triumphalis, a ceremonial coloured version of the Roman toga worn by Consuls (during the reign of Justinian I Consulship became part of the imperial status ...

  9. Himation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Himation

    Statues at the "House of Cleopatra" in Delos, Greece.Woman and man wearing himations. A himation (/ h ɪ ˈ m æ t i ˌ ɒ n / hə-MAT-ee-un, [1] Ancient Greek: ἱμάτιον) was a type of clothing, a mantle or wrap worn by ancient Greek men and women from the Archaic period through the Hellenistic period (c. 750–30 BC). [2]