: a short oblong mantle worn by young men of ancient Greece
Illustration of chlamys
Did you know?
If you had been a man of ancient Greece, you'd likely have worn a chlamys from time to time. This cloak was a short, oblong mantle, typically made of dark wool, and worn draped over the left shoulder and fastened with a fibula at the right shoulder, leaving the right arm uncovered. The chlamys was popular especially among soldiers and messengers. Modern encounters with the chlamys are most likely to occur at museums where a statue of the messenger god Hermes or the Greco-Roman god Apollo might be seen garbed in such. As deities frequently on the move, these two would have appreciated the fact that the garment provided both protection from the elements and freedom of movement.
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Latin, borrowed from Greek chlamyd- chlamýs, of obscure origin
Note:
Ancient Greek chlamýs is one of a small family of words for items of clothing (including chlaîna "loose upper garment," chlanid-, chlanís "light upper garment") that are phonetically similar without having clear derivational interrelations. Speculation on base forms is summarized in Pierre Chantraine, Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque (Paris, 1968, 1984), s.v. chlamýs. The alternation between -a- and -ai- is a mark of vocabulary borrowed from pre-Indo-European substratum, per Edzard Furnée, Die wichtigsten konsonantischen Erscheinungen des Vorgriechischen (Mouton, 1972), pp. 338-39.
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