The Era of Skirt Length Policing: Greece’s Morality Law Revisited

The Era of Skirt Length Policing: Greece’s Morality Law Revisited

Morality Police" in Greece
Policemen measuring the length of women’s skirts. Public Domain

As hard as it is to believe today, there once were “Morality Police” in Greece tasked with measuring the length of women’s skirts.

Under the guise of efforts to preserve morality and order, General Theodoros Pangalos passed laws to control the length of skirts during his short-lived dictatorship (1925–1926).

Much to the astonishment of Greek urban society, it was announced on December 1, 1925, that it would be forbidden for all women to wear skirts in public that had hemlines higher than 30 centimeters (10 inches) from the ground.

The new law would apply to all females aged 12 and over. Those who would flout the law would be prosecuted and their parents would also be held responsible for their behavior.

Was the measure a response to PM’s wife’s fury?

Historians say that Pangalos made the decision in an attempt to pacify his wife, who became furious when visiting his office and saw a young lady wearing a skirt reaching her knee.

Pangalos
Dictator Theodoros Pangalos. Public Domain

Mrs. Pangalos demanded her husband take measures to reverse the so-called “moral decline of the nation” and put an end to “provocative attire”.

Police gave a deadline of December 15 for all women to adjust their wardrobes to the new regulations.

When the deadline expired, policemen armed with measuring tapes began patrolling the streets, hunting down and measuring the skirts of the offenders.

First arrest of the Morality Police in Greece

The first recorded instance of an arrest was 22-year-old Katina Vogiatzi, who was arrested because her skirt was 38 centimeters (14 inches) from the ground.

Morality Police" in Greece
Katina Vogiatzi. Credit: ERT/Public Domain

Vogiatzi was sentenced to 24 hours in prison.

The case became front-page news all over Greece. Most journalists used the case to ridicule the dictatorship, claiming that Greece had much more important problems to solve.

Morality Police" in Greece
Katina Vogiatzi smiling outside the court before being sentenced to 24 hours in prison. Public Domain

Pangalos, who had staged a bloodless coup in June 1925, was overthrown in August 1926.

During the Axis Occupation of Greece, Pangalos and military officers close to him were widely suspected of collaborating with the Germans. Cleared by a court after the war, he later ran unsuccessfully for political office and died in 1952.

Measuring skirt length in Italy and the US

Under Mussolini’s rule in Fascist Italy, strict dress codes were implemented to promote traditional values. The police would sometimes patrol public spaces to ensure women’s skirts met “modest” length requirements, as set by the government, to uphold conservative standards.

In the 1920s, as hemlines rose with the popularity of the “flapper” style, some cities in the United States enacted local ordinances restricting how short skirts could be. Police in certain areas were sometimes tasked with measuring skirts to ensure they conformed to regulations, especially for swimsuits at public beaches.

While skirt length is no longer regulated in most Western countries, certain nations still have strict dress codes that are enforced by authorities, especially in public or religious spaces, though this often pertains more to covering specific parts of the body than to skirt length alone.



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