Shoes and Pattens
The best scholarship focused on shoes and everyday dress accessories from the Middle Ages. Indispensable. SPECULUM

Until recently, very little was known about medieval shoes. Glimpses in manuscript illustrations and on funerary monuments, with the occasional reference by a contemporary writer, was all that the costume historian had as evidence, not least because leather tends to perish after prolonged contact with air, and very few actual examples survived. In recent years, however, nearly 2,000 shoes, many complete and in near-perfect condition, have been discovered preserved on the north bank of the Thames, and are now housed in the Museum of London. This collection, all from well-dated archaeological contexts, fills this vast gap in knowledge, making it possible to chart precisely the progress of shoe fashion between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries.
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Shoes and Pattens
The best scholarship focused on shoes and everyday dress accessories from the Middle Ages. Indispensable. SPECULUM

Until recently, very little was known about medieval shoes. Glimpses in manuscript illustrations and on funerary monuments, with the occasional reference by a contemporary writer, was all that the costume historian had as evidence, not least because leather tends to perish after prolonged contact with air, and very few actual examples survived. In recent years, however, nearly 2,000 shoes, many complete and in near-perfect condition, have been discovered preserved on the north bank of the Thames, and are now housed in the Museum of London. This collection, all from well-dated archaeological contexts, fills this vast gap in knowledge, making it possible to chart precisely the progress of shoe fashion between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries.
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Overview

The best scholarship focused on shoes and everyday dress accessories from the Middle Ages. Indispensable. SPECULUM

Until recently, very little was known about medieval shoes. Glimpses in manuscript illustrations and on funerary monuments, with the occasional reference by a contemporary writer, was all that the costume historian had as evidence, not least because leather tends to perish after prolonged contact with air, and very few actual examples survived. In recent years, however, nearly 2,000 shoes, many complete and in near-perfect condition, have been discovered preserved on the north bank of the Thames, and are now housed in the Museum of London. This collection, all from well-dated archaeological contexts, fills this vast gap in knowledge, making it possible to chart precisely the progress of shoe fashion between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781843832386
Publisher: BOYDELL & BREWER INC
Publication date: 01/26/2006
Series: Medieval Finds from Excavations in London , #2
Pages: 156
Product dimensions: 7.32(w) x 9.69(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgementsvi
Introduction to second editionvii
Introduction1
Recording methods, archive and conventions used in the report7
Shoes from London sites, 1100-14509
Early 12th century
Later 12th century
Early/mid 13th century
Late 13th and early 14th centuries
Mid 14th century
Late 14th century
Early 15th century
Shoemaking and cobbling44
The leather
Shoemaking
Stitching and seams
Soles and rand
Cutting patterns of uppers
Buckles and other fittings
Decoration (embroidery (by Frances Pritchard), openwork, incised and engraved)
Toe stuffing
Repairs and reuse
Pattens91
Wooden pattens, 12th-15th centuries
Leather pattens, 14th-15th centuries
Sizes and wear patterns: social inferences102
Sizes
Wear patterns and deformities of the feet
Shoes in art and literature112
Pictorial and literary parallels
Status
Women's and children's shoes
Glossary123
List of figures and concordance126
Appendices
(1)The excavations131
(2)Conservation (by Katharine Starling)137
Bibliography140
Summaries in French and German143
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