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Sole

Part of the collection: Middle Ages

Popularization note

In the Middle Ages, tanned animal skin was used to make many everyday items, including footwear. Its popularity is evidenced by the huge number of shoe fragments and leather cuttings discovered in particularly large numbers at urban archaeological sites. Medieval leather footwear consisted of several parts: the sole, otherwise the bottom, and the top, constructed in different ways. The oldest footwear in Pomerania was made from a single piece of properly folded and stitched leather. The pressure of the foot when wearing this type of shoe made from one piece of leather caused a characteristic sole-like deformation. Over time, the bottom and top began to be cut out separately, as shoes with a separate sole could be used for longer – the damaged part was replaced with a new one. Over time, with the development of tanning techniques, soles began to be punched out of very thick, less flexible but more durable leather, different from the outer part. Leather footwear was worn by everyone, including young children, as evidenced by the varying sizes of soles discovered during archaeological excavations. The marks preserved on the bottoms of the shoes provide information on the ways in which the components of the shoes were sewn together – in this case, two-needle sewing – as well as on postural defects and foot deformities. Anna B. Kowalska

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown

Object type

footwear

Technique

cutting out, hand sewing

Material

leather

Origin / acquisition method

legal transfer

Creation time / dating

900 — 1100

Creation / finding place

znalezienie: Kamień Pomorski (województwo zachodniopomorskie)

Owner

Muzeum Narodowe w Szczecinie

Identification number

MNS/A/19621/161

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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