Byzantine Empire
Byzantine Empire
Byzantine Empire
Byzantine
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Empire
330 A.D - 1453
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Christianity had a strong influence on
Byzantine art, music, and architecture. Since
History
Constantinople was the political center of the
Empire, it also was the educational center,
where future government officials learned to
read and write the language of ancient
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however, had left its mark on the culture,
years, ending finally in 1453, when the Ottoman Turks conquered never to be entirely erased even after the
Constantinople and renamed it Istanbul. Conquest.
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Byzantine
Clothing
M 330 A.D - 1453
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Overview
Byzantium Clothing
• The Byzantine costume tradition took its form from the Roman
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Empire and its color and decorative tradition from the Orient and the
Middle East. The Roman roots are easy to understand. After all, the
Byzantine Empire began in the fourth century C.E. as the Eastern
Roman Empire; its capital, Constantinople, was for a short time the
capital of the entire Roman Empire. From the Romans the
Byzantines inherited their basic clothing forms, the tunic and toga for
men, and the stola, a type of long dress, for women, as well as their
shoes and their hairstyles. These basic garments had become more
ornate and luxurious late in the Roman Empire, yet it was not long
after the fall of the Roman Empire in that the Byzantines began to
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modify and extend the Roman costume tradition to become
something uniquely their own.
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Men Clothing
The chemise was a long- After the chemise, the garment most
sleeved undergarment worn by prominently worn was the belted
both sexes, and its purpose tunica. It is modeled after the Roman
was similar to today’s
undershirt.
tunica manicata or talaris, a garment
with long sleeves cut in one with the
garment or sewn and attached at the
shoulders. The tunica fell into a
straight-lined skirt, and the length of
the skirt varied from below the knee all
the way to the ankle.
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Another type of
tunica, the dalmatica, In addition, historians
believe that underneath
was also widely worn the tunic, nearly all
and has been noted Byzantine men wore
as the most hose or stockings. What
recognizable is not known is whether
Byzantine garment. the stockings were
Looser in the sleeve gartered, but what
historians do know is
area, it originally was that the top of the hose
worn over another was always to be
tunica. Wearing a concealed by the tunica.
dalmatica came to
Women Clothing
However, when a belt was Women’s necklines, were different too. They
The tunic and chemise were worn slightly still wore tunicas with the slit and V-neck
worn, Byzantine art shows
different from the men. When worn, the styles like men did, but they also had a third
that the belt was worn at least
chemise would peek out from under the type: the scoop neckline.
in three different levels: just
tunica at the wrists, skirt, and neck.
below the bosom, at the
natural waistline, or just
below the waistline.
The silhouette of
women’s tunics
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themselves was
also slightly
different from that
of men. Women’s
tunicas were more
form-fitting and,
thus, more often
required the use of
girdles instead of
belts.
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Fabric
Materials
Used in Byzantine Era
Although various weaves of linens, cotton, and wool were the basic materials used to make
clothing, the Byzantine Empire’s geographic location and status as the trading capital of the
known world allowed it to be exposed to the many resources that merchants and traders brought
from afar. As a result, Byzantine clothing was relatively luxurious in comparison to its surrounding
regions. Clothing would be adorned with borders, pearls, jewels, and even gold. Weaving strips of
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gold into fabrics, a technique dating back to biblical times, was practiced only amongst nobility.
The silkworm was introduced from the East during the reign of Justinian in the sixth century A.D.
Soon, silk became one of the most popular clothing materials to wear. One particular use of silk
was to create the large, rectangular veils that noble women often wore. Byzantine clothes makers
would add embroidery, gold, and jewel appliqués to a specific type of strong, thick silk called
samite for garments.
Patterns characteristic of Byzantine clothing included those with dots, stars, and circles.
Patterned embroidery often appeared near the wrists, waist, and skirt hemline.
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Jewelry we have never quite reached the heights of Byzantine the quality
possessed by something that is excessively expensive.
one at a time on each arm. Each of the down. The Empire prospered from
jewelry arm pieces was very heavy due the many gold mines within its
borders and its prime location for
to the gold, so one amazing aspect of trade. This abundance led to jewelry
Byzantine jewelry is that they were worn becoming as essential and common
in abundance as status symbols. to daily dress as shoes.
Byzantine Footwear
Footwear was the most diverse Even rarer was the use of actual shoes, reserved solely for the upper
form of clothing in the Byzantine
empire. While sandals and slippers classes and even further denoted by color. Green symbolized the
were widely popular among the protovestiarios, a high position at Byzantine court – often reserved for
lower classes, the military often eunuchs. Blue denoted a sebastokrator, a senior court title that also referred
wore boots (at separate times,
either laced around the calf and leg
to rulers within the Byzantine sphere of influence, as a measure of
or covering up to the knee entirely). subordination to the Emperor and Red was reserved for the Emperor
himself.
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