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  • Contributing Member
Posted

Those weren't fully leather. They were embroidered silk uppers with leather soles. Some examples still survive in the storage boxes of certain museums

Al speling misteaks aer all mi own werk..

  • Contributing Member
Posted

Only in very specialised books by archaeologists. Not the sort of books you find through Amazon or your local book store. These are books written as research papers by archaeologists and only a small number of copies are printed up, thus they are very expensive. You need to contact archaeologists or museums directly to find out if such publications by them exist. Very often a museum will direct you to their 'visitors shop' for mainstream books

Al speling misteaks aer all mi own werk..

  • Members
Posted

Lots of different styles of Roman sandals if you google on the net, but nothing with embroidery, at least not from that period and culture.:dunno:

  • Members
Posted

2000 years later those Italians still don't know how to make proper sandals.  It's fun walking around in Rome and watching tourists slip and slide on the cobblestone because someone sold them sandals with nice, shiny veg tan soles 

Kidding aside I don't know anything about those sandals in the photo but they look impossible to make in leather, especially that lion head at the top :P

  • Members
Posted

I was thinking that might be made of some sort of metal, maybe gold or silver. The guy was a king, after all!

  • Contributing Member
Posted

1. remember google is only as good as what people put up on the internet. There is a fair bit of mis-information posted up by people who 'think' they know. 

2. Is a long time since I read the books, they were on loan to me.

but

a. its a myth that Romans wandered around wearing just sandals and togas speaking latin

b. keeping to footwear; just as people do today, Romans and Greeks wore sandals in hot weather, wearing full vamp shoes in cold weather or cold countries, eg Britannia, look up;  vindolanda, shoes

c. keeping to these style of sandals;  they were made of multiple layers of silk, embroidered with copper and silver wire and gold thread. Many of the very upper class had them and they were passed down the family line. Thus some survived a long time and ended up in museums.  They evolved into full vamp soft shoes, which we would call slippers, still  made of silk and heavily embroidered with silver and gold thread, worn by medieval kings and lords. Usually only worn inside around their palaces and castles, reserving their thicker leather boots for outside, rather like what we do today. Nothing really changes that much

Al speling misteaks aer all mi own werk..

  • CFM
Posted (edited)

here is a cool one found in  a well if you made a copy of these and told someone they were roman they wouldn't believe you. Then i found a copy lol click the link to see the original.

 

https://mymodernmet.com/womens-shoes-ancient-rome/

fb4db3786b9fcd74e52b60fedfe75f6c.jpg

Edited by chuck123wapati

Worked in a prison for 30 years if I aint shiny every time I comment its no big deal, I just don't wave pompoms.

“I won’t be wronged, I won’t be insulted, and I won’t be laid a hand on. I don’t do these things to other people, and I require the same from them.” THE DUKE!

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