
Ancient Foundations — Mesopotamian Innovations (3500–539 BCE) – Created by Dinis Guarda with AI tools for Fashionabc
“From the cradle of civilisation flowed not just rivers, but ribbons of innovation that would dress humanity for millennia.”
Between the Tigris and Euphrates, clothing stopped being just a personal matter and became something closer to a system. Fashion in Mesopotamia, garments, footwear, ornament, was never purely functional. It grew alongside the region’s earliest cities, moving from a simple loincloth in the Ubaid period (roughly 5000–4100 BCE) to the richly coloured robes and dresses worn centuries later under the Sassanian Empire (224–651 CE).
What set Mesopotamia apart wasn’t just that people dressed well, it’s that they organised dressing. This is where fashion first became an industry rather than a craft practiced in isolation. The Mesopotamians treated clothing as a kind of language: fabric quality signalled rank, colour carried symbolic weight, and construction itself became a marker of skill and prestige. These are, in many ways, the first fashion “rules”, ones we still recognise today.
The Sumerian Foundation

The Sumerian Foundation – Created by Dinis Guarda with AI tools for Fashionabc
The Sumerians gave fashion one of its earliest signature garments: the kaunakes, a woollen mantle built from tufted rows that suggested overlapping petals or feathers, either sewn onto the fabric or looped directly into the weave. It wasn’t just decorative; it was legible. The length of the garment told you exactly where its wearer stood in the social order. Servants, slaves, and soldiers wore it short. Royalty and deities wore it long. Clothing, in other words, had already become a form of public rank.
Textile Triumph

Textile Triumph – Created by Dinis Guarda with AI tools for Fashionabc
Weaving technology advanced early and quickly. Looms capable of producing fine fabric were in use by around 3000 BCE, and the results were genuinely impressive; some linen fragments recovered from royal tombs are woven almost as finely as modern textile production. This wasn’t a cottage craft. Abundant raw materials, skilled labour, and an active merchant class turned textile manufacturing into one of Mesopotamia’s major industries and a real source of regional wealth.
Colour as Communication

Colour as Communication – Created by Dinis Guarda with AI tools for Fashionabc
Mesopotamian fashion didn’t shy away from boldness. The Assyrians in particular favoured fringed garments in vivid colour; deep purple, light green, bright red, dark indigo, vibrant yellow, all drawn from natural dyes. Their reputation for extravagant dress reached beyond their own borders; the Book of Ezekiel even describes them as “clothed most gorgeously,” a phrase that says as much about their neighbours’ impressions as it does about the Assyrians themselves.
Gender and Garments

Gender and Garments – Created by Dinis Guarda with AI tools for Fashionabc
Both men and women typically wore a large draped piece of fabric, usually wool, later also linen, arranged over a skirt, often edged with tassels or fringe. Over time, women’s fashion developed its own distinct forms. By around 1750 BCE, women were wearing long, bell-shaped skirts constructed in flounced layers over a loincloth, paired with a short, bolero-style jacket that had elbow-length sleeves but stayed open at the front, a style that reflected shifting norms around modesty and display in Babylonian society.
Key Benchmarks

Key Benchmarks – Created by Dinis Guarda with AI tools for Fashionabc
| Period | Culture | Innovation | Significance |
| 3500–3000 BCE | Sumerian | Kaunakes garment | Status communicated through clothing length |
| 3000 BCE | Sumerian | Advanced looms | Industrial-quality weaving becomes possible |
| 2500 BCE | Sumerian | Gender-specific styles | Clothing differentiates by cultural role |
| 1750 BCE | Babylonian | Flounced skirts | Marks a leap in garment construction complexity |
| 700 BCE | Assyrian | Cotton introduction | New textile material enters the region |
By the time the Assyrian and Babylonian empires reached their height, Mesopotamia had already established the core logic of fashion as social communication, a logic that Egypt, Greece, and Rome would each inherit, adapt, and push in new directions.
Dinis Guarda is an author, academic, influencer, serial entrepreneur, and leader in 4IR, AI, Fintech, digital transformation, and Blockchain. Dinis has created various companies such as Ztudium tech platform; founder of global digital platform directory businessabc.net; digital transformation platform to empower, guide and index cities citiesabc.com and fashion technology platform fashionabc.org. He is also the publisher of intelligenthq.com, hedgethink.com and tradersdna.com. He has been working with the likes of UN / UNITAR, UNESCO, European Space Agency, Davos WEF, Philips, Saxo Bank, Mastercard, Barclays, and governments all over the world.
With over two decades of experience in international business, C-level positions, and digital transformation, Dinis has worked with new tech, cryptocurrencies, driven ICOs, regulation, compliance, and legal international processes, and has created a bank, and been involved in the inception of some of the top 100 digital currencies.
He creates and helps build ventures focused on global growth, 360 digital strategies, sustainable innovation, Blockchain, Fintech, AI and new emerging business models such as ICOs / tokenomics.
Dinis is the founder/CEO of ztudium that manages blocksdna / lifesdna. These products and platforms offer multiple AI P2P, fintech, blockchain, search engine and PaaS solutions in consumer wellness healthcare and life style with a global team of experts and universities.
He is the founder of coinsdna a new swiss regulated, Swiss based, institutional grade token and cryptocurrencies blockchain exchange. He is founder of DragonBloc a blockchain, AI, Fintech fund and co-founder of Freedomee project.
Dinis is the author of various books. He has published different books such "4IR AI Blockchain Fintech IoT Reinventing a Nation", "How Businesses and Governments can Prosper with Fintech, Blockchain and AI?”, also the bigger case study and book (400 pages) “Blockchain, AI and Crypto Economics - The Next Tsunami?” last the “Tokenomics and ICOs - How to be good at the new digital world of finance / Crypto” was launched in 2018.
Some of the companies Dinis created or has been involved have reached over 1 USD billions in valuation. Dinis has advised and was responsible for some top financial organisations, 100 cryptocurrencies worldwide and Fortune 500 companies.
Dinis is involved as a strategist, board member and advisor with the payments, lifestyle, blockchain reward community app Glance technologies, for whom he built the blockchain messaging / payment / loyalty software Blockimpact, the seminal Hyperloop Transportations project, Kora, and blockchain cybersecurity Privus.
He is listed in various global fintech, blockchain, AI, social media industry top lists as an influencer in position top 10/20 within 100 rankings: such as Top People In Blockchain | Cointelegraph https://top.cointelegraph.com/ and https://cryptoweekly.co/100/ .
Between 2014 and 2015 he was involved in creating a fabbanking.com a digital bank between Asia and Africa as Chief Commercial Officer and Marketing Officer responsible for all legal, tech and business development. Between 2009 and 2010 he was the founder of one of the world first fintech, social trading platforms tradingfloor.com for Saxo Bank.
He is a shareholder of the fintech social money transfer app Moneymailme and math edutech gamification children’s app Gozoa.
He has been a lecturer at Copenhagen Business School, Groupe INSEEC/Monaco University and other leading world universities.

