Persians wore long black dresses with sleeves and large wide mouth. Actually, the purple dress was the first used in Persia the priestly class. The costumes of the priests also reflect the influence of the conquered peoples of Mesopotamia, especially in the use of rectangular cloth with tassels on the corners. The Persians also introduced in the West felt the Phrygian cap, often with earflaps. This type of clothing was fashionable for the last time in the eighteenth century during the French Revolution under the name of "liberty cap".
Fashion: The Greeks and Romans
The origin of the traditional black dresses of the Greeks and Romans is unclear. The first inhabitants of the western part of Asia Minor and the Greek mainland had a kind of trousers and a tunic with sleeves similar to Persian costume, indicating its origin north. In Greek and Roman civilizations developed extremely simple and comfortable attire consists of the chiton, the chlamys and the robe. The chiton, the garment base, was short on men and to women's ankles.
It consisted of a rectangle of cloth secured or sewn on the shoulders and clung to the waist with a belt or girdle. The chlamys was a short coat folded or secured in a shoulder that was often the only garment, was replaced in winter by a blanket longer, the himation. The woman was wearing the robe, the female version of the chlamys, which was subject to the waist and covered his ankles. Over the years, black dresses contrasting white tunics became ever more lavish in terms of fabrics, colors and decorations.
Black and white robes
The early Romans wore the robe, like a shirt and black dresses- a garment feature of Rome remained official and ceremonial costume throughout the Republic and to the late Western Roman Empire. The toga, although similar to the Greek chlamys or himation, was a piece of wool oval much broader than these, was approximately three times the height of the person, bent over.
In the Western Empire came to be this piece ultimately reduced to a strip of cloth, stole. Black dresses tunic (which survived in different forms and more and more decorations) and stole were adopted by the Christian Church. She wore a long tunic which at first was of wool and later became a cotton and even silk, increasingly sophisticated and cumbersome, and it stole draped head and body covering.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Styles And History Facts About Impressive Black Dresses Models
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