Braccae Explained

Braccae should not be confused with Braies.

Latin: Braccae is the Latin term for "trousers", and in this context is today used to refer to a style of trousers made from wool. According to the Romans, this style of clothing originated from the Gauls.[1]

Latin: Braccae were typically made with a drawstring, and tended to reach from just above the knee at the shortest, to the ankles at the longest, with length generally increasing in tribes living further north.

For the Romans, to encircle the legs and thighs with fasciae, or bands, was understood, in the time of Pompey and Horace, to be a proof of ill health and effeminacy.[2] Roman men typically wore tunics, which were one-piece outfits terminating at or above the knee.

Etymology

The word originates from the Gaulish bhrāg-ikā, after going through a process of syncopation it gave rise to Latin: braca "trouser, pants".[3] The word is cognate with the English breeches. It appears to derive from the Indo-European root Indo-European languages: bhrg- "break", here apparently used in the sense "divide", "separate", as in Scottish Gaelic Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: briogais ("trousers"), in Breton Breton: bragoù ("pants"), in Irish Irish: bríste[4] ("trousers"), Welsh: brycan/brogau in Welsh and in Dutch broek ("trousers"). The Celtic form may have first passed to the Etruscan language, which did not distinguish between the pronounced as /[k]/ and pronounced as /[g]/ sounds. Transition through Etruscan accounts for the Greek being rendered as Latin Latin: amurca, Greek Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: κυβερνἂν as Latin Latin: gubernare.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. [Diodorus Siculus]
  2. Book: Gibbon . Edward . The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire . 1837 . Harper & brothers . 175 . 17 June 2020.
  3. Book: Delamarre, Xavier. Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise: Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental. 2008. Errance. 9782877723695. fr.
  4. Web site: Bríste . Teanglann . Foras na Gaeilge . 2 January 2021.