Prehistoric Shoes
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Hand-stitched
Footwear |
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Prehistoric Shoe
2000BC to 1200AD
adult sizes 4-13
£55.00
Style Code: PP
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Basic turn-shoe with
uppers and sole cut in one piece.
Increased durability
and comfort thanks to the additional 3.5mm(1/7in) tough leather sole fixed
inside, resulting in a total thickness of 6mm in the sole-area. Suitable for most people of
the Pre-Roman period. In later periods a good compromise for people
who should really go barefoot. Colour: natural or saddle-tan |
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Bronze Age Shoe
Hair-On:
adult sizes 4-13
£70.00
Style Code: BAH
Plain Leather:
adult sizes 4-13
£60.00
Style Code: BAL |
Shoe constructed from one single piece of
hair-on skin. The uppers are gathered in pleats around the toes and there is
a vertical seam at the heel.
The shoes are cut from
the skins so that the pile of the hair on the sole is facing in the "wrong"
direction which has an anti-slip-effect when walking.
Increased durability
and comfort thanks to the additional 3.5mm(1/7in) tough leather sole fixed
inside, resulting in a total thickness of 6mm in the sole-area.
Also available in plain leather in the colours saddle-tan, medium-brown and
dark-brown. |
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Iron-Age Shoe with Cut-out Ornamentation:
adult sizes 4-13
£75.00
Style Code: IAC |
Shoe constructed from one single piece of leather. A row
of tongues is gathered around the toes (adjustable) and there is an inverted
Y-shaped seam at the heel. Cut-out ornamentation
around the instep.
Increased durability and comfort thanks to the additional 3.5mm(1/7in) tough
leather sole fixed inside, resulting in a total thickness of 6mm in the
sole-area.
Available with the flesh-side of the leather facing outwards (suede-like
effect) on request, please make a note on your order-form. Available in the
colours medium-brown and dark-brown.
Please read the additional information about authenticity at the bottom of
this page. |
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Iron-Age Shoe with Cut-out and Incised Zigzag Ornamentation:
adult sizes 4-13
£75.00
Style Code: IAZ |
Shoe constructed from one single piece of leather. A row
of tongues is gathered around the toes (adjustable) and there is an inverted
Y-shaped seam at the heel. Cut-out ornamentation
and zig-zag pattern incisions on the three sets of tongues closest to the
instep.
Increased durability and comfort thanks to the additional 3.5mm(1/7in) tough
leather sole fixed inside, resulting in a total thickness of 6mm in the
sole-area.
Available in the colours medium-brown and dark-brown.
Please read the additional information about authenticity at
the bottom of this page. |
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Iron-Age Shoe with Awesome Cut-out and Incised
Ornamentation:
adult sizes 4-13
£90.00
Style Code: IAO |
Shoe constructed from one single piece of leather. A row
of tongues is gathered around the toes (adjustable) and there is an inverted
Y-shaped seam at the heel. The cut-out
ornamentation and incision patterns on the asymmetrically enlarged lateral
side of this shoe are just awesome. Very early period, yes, primitive, NO!
Increased durability and comfort thanks to the additional 3.5mm(1/7in) tough
leather sole fixed inside, resulting in a total thickness of 6mm in the
sole-area.
Available in the colours medium-brown and dark-brown.
Please read the additional information about authenticity at
the bottom of this page. |
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Iron-Age Shoe
Resembling a Mocassin:
adult sizes 4-13
£75.00
Style Code: IAM |
Shoe constructed from one single piece of leather. This
shoe was widely worn throughout the Iron-Age and has the typical laces that
are wrapped all the way round the foot. Keeps your feet warmer than the
sandal-type styles.
Typical is the heel-seam which joins two crescent-shaped heel-quarters and
extends approx. 1inch underneath the heel. This authentic "design-flaw"
means that the shoes may require mending sooner than other types. If you
wish to have them made with an inverted Y-shaped heel-seam instead, just let
me know. Please note that the seam across the instep may or may not be
on the pair you order, depending on your foot-shape and the materials
available.
Increased durability
and comfort thanks to the additional 3.5mm(1/7in) tough leather sole fixed
inside, resulting in a total thickness of 6mm in the sole-area.
Can be made from hair-on skin, with the hair facing inwards or the hair on
the outside - but will cost a lot more than in plain leather. Ask us for a
quote.
Available in the colours medium-brown and dark-brown.
Please read the additional information about authenticity at
the bottom of this page. |
Raw-hide for shoe styles PP and BAL: These shoes
were made in some cultures and in some periods from raw-hide. The raw-hide
available to us is very stiff and uncomfortable to wear and we do not recommend
this. It is also not possible to fit an extra sole-layer inside. If you require
the shoes as an exhibit only, we can make shoe-style PP or BAH from rawhide for you.
Iron Age Shoes:
Where is the archaeological evidence?
Unfortunately to my knowledge there are no Iron-Age shoe-finds from the British
Isles. If you know of Iron-Age shoes for the British Isles I would very much
like to hear about it. The originals for the shoes you see reproduced here come
all from the continent. Mostly Denmark and Northern Germany, also a few from
Southern Germany. Quite a few were found within 50 miles of Haithabu, a thriving
trading town at the time with wide reaching international contacts, including
the British Isles. The shoe-finds from Southern Germany, some 600 miles south
Haithabu look very similar to the finds from Denmark and Schleswig, suggesting
that these shoe-types were wide-spread throughout Central and Northern Europe at
the time.
So why are there no finds for the British Isles? I don't know. The only
suggestion I can make (please note, this is only a suggestion, please do not pass
this on as fact!) is that maybe the corresponding strata of peat-bog in which
most of the continental finds were located were dug up and used for fuel in
Britain much earlier than on the continent; at a time when nobody was interested
in such finds and discarded them. If you are an archaeologist reading this and
you know more about bogs than I, I would be grateful if you contacted me and set
me right on this assumption.
How accurate is the dating?
The vast majority of the shoe-finds, and there are approx. 30 in total, are
from bog-finds. Unfortunately a lot of these finds were unearthed in Victorian
times or even earlier and the sites and artefacts were therefore not treated as
scientifically as they would be today. Many of the shoes are therefore undatable. One
shoe was dated through pollen analysis, another through pottery found
on the same site as the shoe. One shoe was dated with the C14 method. However, some of the
dating just states "Iron Age" leaving us with a time-bracket from 700BC to 800AD
which is surely too wide.
I am sorry that I do not have the answers, but I at least am doing my best not to mislead
you.
Iron Age Mocassins Eek!
It is a bit of a culture shock because we are so used to visualizing Iron Age
people with the tongue and cross-lace shoes that are depicted on the Gundestrup
cauldron, but at least 7 specimens of the mocassin type are known from finds in
Denmark and Northern Germany. The patterns vary, but the basic construction
principle stays the same. Although not as pretty as the ornamented
sandal-styles, these shoes are very useful and due to their covered-up design they are the warmer alternative. Variations of these shoes were found in
plain leather, hair-on calf/cow-skin with the hair on the inside on one specimen
and on the outside on another. Again, that would make them warmer, but if you
want furry boots (an abomination amongst Viking re-enactors who work so hard to
dispel just this cliche) please remember that they will not stay furry for very
long. Friction during wear will cause the hairs to fall out pretty quickly - how
about considering the Iron Age equivalent of socks instead?
Another typical feature of the mocassin-type shoes is the heel-seam which joins
two crescent-shaped heel-quarters and extends approx. 1 inch underneath the
heel. It works, especially in a culture where people used to bear most of their
weight on the balls of their feet rather than on the heels as we do today. However, because
of this authentic "design flaw" these shoes may need mending sooner than the
types with the inverted Y-shaped heel.
Socks and Things
Found inside one of the mocassin-style shoes were plant-fibres of
unidentified grasses pointing towards the padding of shoes with grass or straw,
another shoe contained a piece of woollen cloth approx. 30 by 20 cm, pointing towards
the use of foot-wraps, and yet another contained an amputated foot (how careless to
mislay your feet with your shoes like that!) with woollen fibres caught
underneath the toes pointing towards the use of a fleecy woollen insole.
Extras
Heel Cushions (Price GBP
3.00):
These are modern leather covered latex wedges that you can wear inside your
shoes. They help to prevent painful heels if you are not used to walking in
flat-soled shoes. As they are loose you can order as many pairs as you like to
wear with other shoes as well. In this case please specify for what shoe-size
you are ordering.
Colours (included in
Price):
Prehistoric hand-stitched shoes come in three colours: saddle-tan, medium brown
and dark brown. Please specify when ordering.
Please note that some of the Iron-Age shoes come only in medium brown and dark
brown because we cannot get the high-quality lacing that we need for these
shoes, in saddle-tan and dark laces
look odd and leave marks on pale coloured shoes.
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© Ana Deissler May 2006