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mm16.900
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The Evolution of Women's Fashion: What Women Were Forced to Wear for 5000 Years. The history of women's fashion has little to do with beauty. It is a history of control. Every era, every empire, every religion, every government had one thing in common: they all decided what a woman could and could not put on her body. And they all had a punishment for women who refused. This video covers 20 stages of women's fashion from 3000 BC ancient Egypt to 2024, showing not just what changed but who was controlling it and what happened to women who broke the rules. 3000 women burned alive every year in Victorian England. Not in wars. In their own homes. Because their crinoline skirts caught fire on open hearths. The fashion was mandated by society. The deaths were ignored for decades. The corset collapsed lungs, displaced organs, and caused miscarriages. Doctors prescribed it. Husbands enforced it. Women who refused to wear one were considered mentally ill. In 1960s London, the government debated banning the mini skirt in parliament. In parts of the world today, hemlines are still enforced by law. This is not a fashion video. This is a power video. Fashion was just the weapon. Eras covered in this video: 00:00 Kalasiris - Ancient Egypt 3000 BC 00:08 Chiton - Classical Greece 500 BC 00:16 Stola - Roman Empire 100 AD 00:24 Dalmatic - Byzantine Empire 500 AD 00:32 Kirtle - Medieval Europe 1100 AD 00:40 Cotehardie - Late Medieval 1350 AD 00:48 Farthingale Gown - Tudor England 1550 AD 00:56 Drum Farthingale and Ruff - Elizabethan 1580 AD 01:04 Mantua - Restoration England 1680 AD 01:12 Robe a la Francaise - French Baroque 1740 AD 01:20 Chemise Dress - French Revolution 1790 AD 01:28 Empire Gown - Napoleonic Era 1805 AD 01:36 Crinoline Gown - Victorian Era 1855 AD 01:44 Bustle Gown - Late Victorian 1875 AD 01:52 S-Bend Corset Dress - Edwardian 1900 AD 02:00 Flapper Dress - Roaring Twenties 1925 AD 02:08 Utility Dress - Wartime 1942 AD 02:16 New Look Ball Gown - Post-War 1947 AD 02:24 Mini Dress - Cultural Revolution 1965 AD 02:32 Unrestricted Individual Choice - Today What you will learn watching this video: - The ancient Egyptian Kalasiris was one of the most liberated garments women ever wore, 5000 years ago, before most of recorded history. It got more restrictive from there. - Medieval women could be legally beaten by their husbands for dressing above their social class. Sumptuary laws told you exactly what fabric, color, and trim your rank allowed. Wearing the wrong color was a criminal offense. - The French Revolution did not just overthrow the monarchy. It overthrew the corset, briefly. Women wore loose muslin dresses with visible silhouettes for the first time in centuries. The Church called it immoral. Within 20 years the corset returned. - The 1947 Dior New Look pushed the silhouette back to the 1880s after the relative freedom women gained during wartime. Women protested in the streets of Paris and London. Dior called it elegance. They called it a step backward. - The mini skirt of 1965 was banned in multiple countries. In some it still is. Why this video exists: Most fashion history content focuses on aesthetics. This video focuses on the power structure behind the aesthetics. Who benefited from each silhouette. Who suffered. Who decided. Who enforced it. Every era is presented with its real historical context including the health consequences, the legal framework, and the people who controlled what women wore.   Subscribe to Timeless History for more visual evolution series that show history the way it actually happened. #FashionHistory #EvolutionOfFashion #WomensFashion #WomensHistory
The Evolution of Women's Fashion: What Women Were Forced to Wear for 5000 Years. The history of women's fashion has little to do with beauty. It is a history of control. Every era, every empire, every religion, every government had one thing in common: they all decided what a woman could and could not put on her body. And they all had a punishment for women who refused. This video covers 20 stages of women's fashion from 3000 BC ancient Egypt to 2024, showing not just what changed but who was controlling it and what happened to women who broke the rules. 3000 women burned alive every year in Victorian England. Not in wars. In their own homes. Because their crinoline skirts caught fire on open hearths. The fashion was mandated by society. The deaths were ignored for decades. The corset collapsed lungs, displaced organs, and caused miscarriages. Doctors prescribed it. Husbands enforced it. Women who refused to wear one were considered mentally ill. In 1960s London, the government debated banning the mini skirt in parliament. In parts of the world today, hemlines are still enforced by law. This is not a fashion video. This is a power video. Fashion was just the weapon. Eras covered in this video: 00:00 Kalasiris - Ancient Egypt 3000 BC 00:08 Chiton - Classical Greece 500 BC 00:16 Stola - Roman Empire 100 AD 00:24 Dalmatic - Byzantine Empire 500 AD 00:32 Kirtle - Medieval Europe 1100 AD 00:40 Cotehardie - Late Medieval 1350 AD 00:48 Farthingale Gown - Tudor England 1550 AD 00:56 Drum Farthingale and Ruff - Elizabethan 1580 AD 01:04 Mantua - Restoration England 1680 AD 01:12 Robe a la Francaise - French Baroque 1740 AD 01:20 Chemise Dress - French Revolution 1790 AD 01:28 Empire Gown - Napoleonic Era 1805 AD 01:36 Crinoline Gown - Victorian Era 1855 AD 01:44 Bustle Gown - Late Victorian 1875 AD 01:52 S-Bend Corset Dress - Edwardian 1900 AD 02:00 Flapper Dress - Roaring Twenties 1925 AD 02:08 Utility Dress - Wartime 1942 AD 02:16 New Look Ball Gown - Post-War 1947 AD 02:24 Mini Dress - Cultural Revolution 1965 AD 02:32 Unrestricted Individual Choice - Today What you will learn watching this video: - The ancient Egyptian Kalasiris was one of the most liberated garments women ever wore, 5000 years ago, before most of recorded history. It got more restrictive from there. - Medieval women could be legally beaten by their husbands for dressing above their social class. Sumptuary laws told you exactly what fabric, color, and trim your rank allowed. Wearing the wrong color was a criminal offense. - The French Revolution did not just overthrow the monarchy. It overthrew the corset, briefly. Women wore loose muslin dresses with visible silhouettes for the first time in centuries. The Church called it immoral. Within 20 years the corset returned. - The 1947 Dior New Look pushed the silhouette back to the 1880s after the relative freedom women gained during wartime. Women protested in the streets of Paris and London. Dior called it elegance. They called it a step backward. - The mini skirt of 1965 was banned in multiple countries. In some it still is. Why this video exists: Most fashion history content focuses on aesthetics. This video focuses on the power structure behind the aesthetics. Who benefited from each silhouette. Who suffered. Who decided. Who enforced it. Every era is presented with its real historical context including the health consequences, the legal framework, and the people who controlled what women wore. Subscribe to Timeless History for more visual evolution series that show history the way it actually happened. #FashionHistory #EvolutionOfFashion #WomensFashion #WomensHistory

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