
A
Brief History of Shoes
Scientists
estimate the first shoes were made from animal skins during the Ice
Age (5000,000 years ago). Inclement weather in the Northern Hemisphere
has lent many historians to believe the need for foot protection.
The biggest find of shoes from this period is thought to date back
to 8000 BC and belonged to Native Americans in Missouri. From the
examples discovered there were evidence of left and right shoes. Primitive
shoes dating back to 3300BC were found on the Ice Man, discovered
in the French Alps. According to (Spindler, 1993) the Neolithic herdsman
of 3000 BC wore shoes on both feet similar to the footwear of the
Laplanders.
Each
shoe consisted of an oval piece of leather with the edges turned up
and bound with strong leather thongs. The material used was leather
not fur and the soles were made from cowhide. Attached to the thongs
was a net, knotted from grasscords to cover the instep and heel. Shoes
were filled with grass to keep the feet warm. Boot leggings of fur
were attatched to leather soles and worn to protect against the weather.
The boots were tied around the ankle with grass cords.Rough shoes
protected the feet of Stone Age people from rocks and thorns. Sandals
are believed to be the first crafted foot coverings, the successors
to primitive wrappings. The design was both simple and practical.
A stiff sole for protection was attached to the foot, usually with
straps or thongs. The soles were made from almost anything that was
at hand.
Slate
cosmetics tablets of Pharaoh Narmer (3000 BC) depict the Pharaoh followed
by a slave bearing his sandals. The image suggests that in ancient
Egypt the sandal was a sign of power and rank. The sandals were initially
made from a footprint in wet sand. Braided papyrus was then moulded
into soles and the sandals often had turned up toes. Sometimes the
instep of the sandal was decorated with figures of men defeated in
battle. The difference between the commoner's sandal and the Pharaoh's
sandal was a peaked toe. This ostentatious extension had no function
but merely denoted a person of high born status and historians believe
this was the influence of Hittie (1280 BC). Soles were dyed and the
sandals were made to accommodate right and left fittings. Egyptian
women would adorn their sandals with jewels. Australian Aboriginal
people wore rough sandals but only the central tribes were known to
do so. The vast majority went unshod. Ceremonial shoes made from emu
feathers were worn on special occassions by some members of the tribe.
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