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Most men in the Middle Ages wore tunics to the knee, but old men and monks wore long tunics in their daily lives. However, the Middle Ages men wore long tunics for festivals and ceremonies. Subsequently, the wearing of pants below the tunics caught, not only as part of a fashion trend, but for practical reasons. It was more comfortable and warm trousers to wear while riding in cold climates. Another form of trousers worn at the time, especially from the nobility, the tights. But these few tights is not the kind that we now know, because knitting was not invented in the first half of the Middle Ages. Thus, tights were worn under loose tunics. Cape wool and leather were also worn to warm.
Medieval men wore different outfits on the basis of their status in life, especially from the 11th century to the last part of the Middle Ages. The farmers wore simple clothing, usually made of wool or of raw canvas; nobility wore expensive clothes and detailed with emphasis on the sleeves of their clothes, and knights wore surcoats with the arms or family crest. By the end of the 13th century, other forms of clothing has been used by medieval men and also among those undershirts, briefs, socks, cloaks, jackets, colorful clothes (often worn by monks), hats, pants, coats, shoes, belts and other accessories, among many others.
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