,
Sicily, showing "bikini girls" in an athletic contest The basic garment for both genders and all classes was the
tunica (tunic). In its simplest form, the tunic was a single rectangle of woven fabric, originally woolen, but from the mid-republic onward, increasingly made from linen. It was sewn into a wide, sleeveless tubular shape and pinned around the shoulders like a Greek
chiton, to form openings for the neck and arms. In some examples from the eastern part of the empire, neck openings were created in the weaving. Sleeves could be added, or formed
in situ from the excess width. Most working men wore knee-length, short-sleeved tunics, secured at the waist with a belt. Some traditionalists considered long sleeved tunics appropriate only for women, very long tunics on men as a sign of effeminacy, and short or unbelted tunics as marks of servility; nevertheless, very long-sleeved, loosely belted tunics were also fashionably unconventional and were adopted by some Roman men; for example, by
Julius Caesar. Women's tunics were usually ankle or foot-length, long-sleeved, and could be worn loosely or belted. For comfort and protection from cold, both sexes could wear a soft under-tunic or vest (
subucula) beneath a coarser over-tunic; in winter, the Emperor
Augustus, whose physique and constitution were never particularly robust, wore up to four tunics, over a vest. Although essentially simple in basic design, tunics could also be luxurious in their fabric, colours and detailing. Loincloths, known as
subligacula or
subligaria could be worn under a tunic. They could also be worn on their own, particularly by slaves who engaged in hot, sweaty or dirty work. Women wore both loincloth and
strophium (a breast cloth) under their tunics; and some wore tailored underwear for work or leisure. Roman women could also wear a
fascia pectoralis, a breast-wrap similar to a modern women's bra. A 4th-century AD Sicillian mosaic shows several "bikini girls" performing athletic feats; in 1953 a Roman leather bikini bottom was excavated from a well in London.
Stola and palla wearing a
stola and
palla Besides tunics, married citizen women wore a simple garment known as a
stola (pl.
stolae) which was associated with traditional Roman female virtues, especially modesty. In the early
Roman Republic, the
stola was reserved for
patrician women. Shortly before the
Second Punic War, the right to wear it was extended to plebeian matrons, and to freedwomen who had acquired the status of matron through marriage to a citizen. Stolae typically comprised two rectangular segments of cloth joined at the side by
fibulae and buttons in a manner allowing the garment to be draped in elegant but concealing folds, covering the whole body including the feet. Over the
stola, citizen-women often wore the
palla, a sort of rectangular shawl up to 11 feet long, and five wide. It could be worn as a coat, or draped over the left shoulder, under the right arm, and then over the left arm. Outdoors and in public, a
chaste matron's hair was bound up in woollen bands (fillets, or
vitae) in a high-piled style known as
tutulus. Her face was concealed from the public, male gaze with a veil; her
palla could also serve as a hooded cloak. Two ancient literary sources mention use of a coloured strip or edging (a
limbus) on a woman's "mantle", or on the hem of their tunic; probably a mark of their high status, and presumably purple. Outside the confines of their homes, matrons were expected to wear veils; a matron who appeared without a veil was held to have repudiated her marriage. High-caste women convicted of adultery, and high-class female prostitutes (
meretrices), were not only forbidden public use of the
stola, but might have been expected to wear a
toga muliebris (a "woman's toga") as a sign of their
infamy. ==Freedmen, freedwomen and slaves==