No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
A toga was the symbol of Roman citizenship, worn by males. However women who were prostitutes were required to wear red togas in public as a sign of their profession.
No, at least not the good girls. The toga was strictly a man's garment. Only prostitutes wore togas as a sign of their profession.
Only if they gained Roman citizenship, and that was relatively rare.
People in the Roman empire wore the clothing of the times, which was tunics and cloaks, sometimes togas for the men and long dresses and shawls for the women.
togas. robe kind of things wraped around
puple ones don't know y
They never did. First of all a toga was a male garment. It was only worn by Roman men who were citizens. The Greeks did not wear togas. Roman women wore a stola and palla. The Greeks used a garment called a chiton for both men and women.
togas
yes
Only if they gained Roman citizenship, and that was relatively rare.
togas....you, nevermind.
solats
People in the Roman empire wore the clothing of the times, which was tunics and cloaks, sometimes togas for the men and long dresses and shawls for the women.
Robes and Togas, the same as most of the Roman Empire.
Either nothing, or ripped, shabby, cheap togas
togas. robe kind of things wraped around
Oh yes. He believed in Roman tradition and wore his toga in public. He even passed a law that all citizens had to wear their togas at state and formal occasions.
puple ones don't know y
They wear togas and the colour of the toga changes to match the higher rank oficers