How Did the Ancient Romans Actually Dress?
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May 23, 2025
Picture a citizen of the Roman Empire. What are they wearing? Most likely, you imagined someone wearing a white toga, sandals, and maybe some kind of laurel on their head. But most ancient Romans didn't really dress that way in their day-to-day lives.
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When you picture a citizen of the Roman Empire
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you probably imagine someone wearing a white toga, sandals, and maybe some kind of laurel on their head
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Wait, your biggest dicker's ears of this. But despite what we see in movies like Gladiator
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and television shows like Rome, most Romans didn't really dress that way
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Today, we're going to take a look at what the ancient Romans actually wore. Toga, toga
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Toga, toga, toga. Romans did wear togas. Movies didn't make that part up
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In fact, they were common enough that the Romans sometimes referred to themselves as togati, or people of the toga
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which sounds like a 70s yacht rock album. But togas weren't casual wear
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They were status symbols worn on special occasions and reserved mostly for wealthy men
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basically the ancient Roman equivalent of a nice suit or tuxedo. Interestingly, their status as formal wear
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is one of the main reasons modern people think all Romans wore them
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Since togas feature prominently in contemporary statues and paintings, they seem like they were everywhere
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But it was usually only the wealthiest who could afford a sculpture or painting of themselves
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in the first place. I've got some money to blow. Maybe I'll get a sculpture of myself
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There were several toga varieties. The classic white toga, or toga virilis
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was worn by young men to signal their passage into adulthood. Politicians wore a bleached version of the white toga
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called the toga candida. In times of mourning, Romans wore togas of dark wool
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The rarest was the toga picta, dyed purple with gold embroidery. This was reserved for generals celebrating a triumph
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Togas were a status symbol mostly because they required lots of fabric
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This fabric, made from wool, was expensive and time-consuming to produce, and like most of the best textiles, was only affordable to the wealthy
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A toga was cut from a single piece of wool cloth in a semicircular shape, and the longest any toga could be
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was about 18 feet. Like tying some of today's more elaborate neckties
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wrapping a toga was a complicated process. According to the Oxford Classical Dictionary
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one corner would be placed before the feet, and the straight edge was taken up and over the left shoulder
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It was then pulled across the back and under or over the right arm, across the chest, and over the left shoulder again
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The second corner was left hanging behind the knees, and the curved edge became the garment's hem
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In addition to the toga itself, how a toga was worn was also something of a status symbol
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A well-fitted and well-maintained toga was a marker of wealth and sophistication And since it very difficult to wrap a toga around one body alone trust me on that one wealthy Romans came to value slaves who had toga wrapping skills
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In ancient Roman times, clothing dyes had to come from natural sources
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The dye used to make a classic purple tunic worn by a Roman emperor, for example, was extracted from the glands
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of a variety of sea snail called the hexaplex trunculus, which you and your friends might call the banded dye murex
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which is native to the Mediterranean. These sea snails live in deeper water and were harvested via traps suspended from floats
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Once enough shells were collected, it would be left in the sun to putrefy and were then crushed
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leaving a distinct purple liquid. The name for this shade of purple was Tyrian purple. It was
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also sometimes known as royal purple or imperial purple. The Romans did not come up with a whole
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sea snail crushing thing. They actually learned the technique from one of their earliest rivals
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the Phoenician civilization. The Phoenicians were seafaring and trading people based in the eastern Mediterranean
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They were so heavily associated with purple dye, the name Phoenician is actually a Greek word for them
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that literally means purple. It's estimated that roughly 10,000 shells were needed to produce just one gram of purple dye
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That was a tough time to be a sea snail. The dye manufacturing site at the ancient city of Sidon
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in modern-day Lebanon even included a waste dump of crushed shells about 40 meters high
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The female counterpart to the toga was known as the stola. This was a long sleeveless garment that was sometimes hung from the shoulders with straps
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If you want an easy point of reference for what that looked like, we point you to the
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Statue of Liberty, who was depicted in a stola. Stolas were worn only by married women, and the garment was considered a signifier of their status
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Unlike togas, which came in numerous varieties that denoted social status, stolas were relatively simple, as women didn't have a wide spectrum of career opportunities
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Instead, Roman women used jewelry and elaborate hairstyles to advertise their wealth and social
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rank. But Roman women took their clothes seriously. In 195 BC, they even marched in
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protest of the Lexopia, a series of laws enacted in response to the financial issues of the Second
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Punic War that restricted extravagant spending on fashion. The clothing item of choice for unmarried women
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was a simple tunic. The tunic was also the primary garment for lower class men
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as well as girls and boys. Silk originated in China as early as 6 BCE and probably no later than 3 BCE Chinese merchants gradually spread the luxury fabric across Asia via the famous Silk Road and later it made it into the Middle East and eventually the Mediterranean
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The Greeks and Romans were aware of the existence of China and its silk as early as the 4th century BCE
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In their writings, they even referred to China as Ceres, literally the Kingdom of Silk
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Silk made its way into Roman wardrobes by the 1st century BCE
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There are even surviving references to it in the writings of Augustan poets like Ovid and Horace
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The historian Suetonius recorded the fact that the emperor Caligula was fond of wearing silk
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Emperor Marcus Aurelius sent the first envoy to China in 166 CE, the first known instance of
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direct contact between the two civilizations. That really kicked things off because by 380 CE
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the soldier and historian Marcellinus Ammianus observed that the use of silk, which was once
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confined to the nobility has now spread to all classes without distinction, even to the lowest
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Ancient Roman women had their own version of activewear that was relatively similar to the modern bikini
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The top was called a strophium, or breastband, and it was often made of linen, and the bottom
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was called a subligaculum. Men, on the other hand, wore a perizoma
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or more commonly known as the loincloth. However, despite their similarity to swimwear
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these outfits were actually worn for athletics, not for swimming. For example, a Roman woman might
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wear such an outfit to participate in sports like running, discus throwing, the long jump
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or an ancient ballgame that was one of the earliest form of team sports. Archaeologists
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have recovered some of these garments. One thong-like subligaculum is on display at the
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Museum of London. A detailed mosaic showing these garments can be seen at the Villa Romana del Casale
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near Piazza Armarina in Sicily. While it's likely that many Romans simply went commando
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we do know that at least some Romans wore undergarments. For the most part, Roman undergarments
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were similar to what they wore when playing sports. Roman men and women both sometimes wore a subligoculum
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also called the sublicker, underneath their tunics. Roman women also wore the stroppia
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or an alternative support garment called a mamillare. Roman women also sometimes wore an undertoga
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like a slip called a super-rus or super-room. Most of these garments would have been made
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from either linen or leather. Since nudity was somewhat taboo in their society
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people from the lowest social strata, such as peasants or gladiators were often depicted wearing nothing but their underwear Another thing the movies got right
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is that the Romans did wear the sandals they're usually depicted in. They show
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But in reality, those sandals were mainly worn indoors. When venturing outside, Romans often
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wore shoes that fully covered their feet. These were often made out of leather
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and were available to all classes, although wealthier Romans did wear more expensive shoes
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Some things don't change. Unlike today, Roman shoes appear to have been styled as unisex garments
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Roman soldiers, as you might expect, had an even more durable footwear option available to them
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Called the Caligae, these were open-toed boots made with hobnails that gave extra traction
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The Roman emperor Gaius Kaiser Augustus Germanicus, better known by his nickname Caligula, or Little Boots
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received his nickname from the small boots made for him to wear on his father Gomaticus' campaigns as a boy
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Cute story, if Caligula wasn't synonymous with depraved tyranny. If you've ever wondered how people washed their clothes
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before soap or Tide Pods were widely available, then here's a handy tip
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They wash them in urine. You see, like modern cleaning products, urine is chock full of ammonia
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a natural solvent that breaks up dirt and grease. In fact, even after soap became popular in Europe
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for personal hygiene, urine was still used to get rid of tough stains
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Romans collected their urine in vessels that lined the streets. Pedestrians would simply stop and relieve themselves
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and continue with their day. When full, these urine jugs would go to a fullonica, or laundry
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Once the urine was poured over dirty clothes, a Roman laundry worker would stand in the tub and stomp on it
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That's a tough job, but it could be shittier. Sandals are a very sensible choice for the Mediterranean
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climate during the warmer months of the year. But the Romans conquered plenty of regions
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with less hospitable climates. Places in the empire like Great Britain and parts of southern Scandinavia get extremely cold
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And in all fairness, Rome gets chilly too. So when Romans needed a cold weather option
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they took socks, knitted with a divided toe, and wore them with sandals
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Divers excavating an underwater Roman fort near the River Tees near Darlington in the UK
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discovered a razor handle carved to resemble a human foot. And it's clearly wearing sandals with socks
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The look also appeared on a bronze statue discovered in Southwark. This proves that it's not just your dad
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that thinks socks and sandals are practical and fashionable. Some things never go out of style
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#Costumes
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