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Archaeological Footwear: Development of Shoe Patterns and Styles from Prehistory Til the 1600's [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 408 pages, height x width x depth: 295x211x30 mm, weight: 2041 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Mar-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Stichting Promotie Archeologie
  • ISBN-10: 9089321179
  • ISBN-13: 9789089321176
  • Formāts: Hardback, 408 pages, height x width x depth: 295x211x30 mm, weight: 2041 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Mar-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Stichting Promotie Archeologie
  • ISBN-10: 9089321179
  • ISBN-13: 9789089321176
The knowledge of how to make a shoe pattern was certainly the ancient shoemaker’s most closely guarded secret, passed from master to apprentice but never written down. Now, after 20 years of research, the principles for making ancient shoe patterns have been rediscovered.

The knowledge of how to make a shoe pattern was certainly the ancient shoemaker’s most closely guarded secret, passed from master to apprentice but never written down. Now, after 20 years of research, the principles for making ancient shoe patterns have been rediscovered.This comprehensive guide to European archaeological footwear is richly illustrated with drawings and photographs of archaeological leather shoe finds and shoe reconstructions. A catalogue presents each named shoe style along with the cutting patterns used, a concise description and a full list of the published examples. The volume also includes a short history of calceological studies, case studies, the fundamental research methods and an overview of shoe sole/upper constructions for archaeological leather shoes. Marquita Volken uses the practical knowledge and research techniques developed by Olaf Goubitz in com-bination with the methods established by Carol van Driel-Murray and Willy Groenmann-van Waateringe to identify the 17 basic types of cutting patterns used for archaeological leather footwear. Over 400 named shoe styles are identified and presented within a chronological framework covering Prehistory, the Roman period, the Middle Ages and the early modern times.
1 Introduction
1(10)
1.1 Overview of calceology
1(4)
1.2 Current methods in calceological research
5(6)
2 Review of literature and history of calceological research
11(18)
2.1 Introduction and delimitation of the subject and corpus
11(1)
2.2 The first collections: Ancient shoes from peat beds and bogs
12(4)
2.3 The World War II research hiatus and the second half of the twentieth century
16(2)
2.4 Methodological problems associated with the expanding literature base
18(4)
2.5 The end of the twentieth century; the search for solutions
22(7)
3 Methodology
29(24)
3.1 The history of the primary cutting pattern research
29(9)
3.2 Technical interpretation of the primary cutting patterns
38(15)
4 Primary cutting patterns
53(24)
4.1 Primary cutting patterns: integral soled shoes
55(4)
4.2 Hybrid cutting patterns (PCP: -Y, -Wd, -Jd, -Vvd)
59(6)
4.3 Primary cutting patterns: separately soled shoes
65(8)
4.4 Conclusion Primary Cutting Patterns
73(4)
5 Named shoe styles and chronology
77(110)
5.1
1. Introduction
77(3)
5.2 Neolithic leather footwear
80(3)
5.3 Bronze Age leather footwear
83(2)
5.4 Iron Age leather footwear
85(3)
5.5 Roman period leather footwear
88(27)
5.6 Late Antiquity leather footwear
115(2)
5.7 Early Middle Ages leather footwear
117(14)
5.8 Mediaeval leather footwear
131(24)
5.9 Late Middle Ages leather footwear
155(12)
5.10 Late Middle Ages / sixteenth century leather footwear
167(14)
5.11 Discussion of primary cutting patterns, named styles and chronology
181(6)
6 Documentation techniques
187(36)
6.1 Drawing recovered archaeological fragments and footwear
187(4)
6.2 Inventory of style elements
191(8)
6.3 Fastenings
199(15)
6.4 Sole/upper constructions
214(6)
6.5 Shoemaking, pattern making and reconstructive archaeology
220(3)
7 Conclusion
223(18)
8.1 Summary
229(2)
8.2 Resume
231(2)
8.3 Zusammenfassung
233(2)
8.4 Glossary
235(6)
9 Catalogue
241(142)
10 Bibliography
383(18)
11 Index
401