Upper class had fine cloths and more then one outfit.Commoners were just lucky enough to have one set of cloth.
In Shakespeare's time, the upper class had more wealth, education, social status, and political power compared to commoners. They were often landowners, nobility, or royalty, while commoners were usually peasants, artisans, or laborers. The upper class had access to better living conditions, entertainment, and opportunities for advancement, while commoners faced poverty, hard labor, and limited social mobility.
The upper class were rich, were as the lower were poor.
Athens had citizens as the upper class Sparta's upper class was called equals not citizens.
Phoenicians used linen or cotton fabric for clothing for the commoners. The upper-class wore clothing out of silks and brocades.
The class system in 1912 was primarily structured around socioeconomic status and birthright. The main classes were the upper class (wealthy elites), middle class (professionals and business owners), and lower class (working class and poor). The main differences between the classes included income levels, access to education, social status, and lifestyle opportunities.
The upper class was the landowning patrician aristocracy. The second most important class was the equites (cavalrymen). This was an entrepreneurial class which was given equte status, which was like a lower tier aristocracy. The plebeians were the commoners.
The similarities of Renaissance men and women were that they both had to be charming and know art. The differences were men had to create art while women had to inspire art and men had to strive in every field.
The conflict of orders in ancient Rome resulted in increased tensions between the patricians (upper class) and plebeians (commoners). Eventually, concessions were made to the plebeians, such as the creation of democratic institutions like the tribunes and the Twelve Tables of Roman Law, to address their grievances.
The difference between any two consecutive lower (or upper) class limits it the class width.
Upper class.
low class, middle class, upper class/high class
Upper middle class