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Roman Feet and Shoes: The cultural significance of feet, footwear, and their representations in the north-western provinces
Elizabeth Shaw
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This book examines the significance of feet, footwear, and the artefacts that depicted them to people living in the north-western provinces of the Roman Empire. It considers trends and symbolism in Roman hobnailing patterns, and Roman ritual use of shoes as evidenced by data from burials and wells. It also investigates 1,492 foot-shaped artefacts across 12 different categories, including jugs with feet on their handles, knife or razor handles, footlamps, sandal fibulae, and carved footprints. It finds that Roman foot-shaped artefacts can have many meanings, frequently simultaneously. These meanings include use as novelty items, markers of fashion and status, signatures, votive offerings, and more. The potential apotropaic role of footwear is also discussed. This unique study is distinguished by a large database, wide geographical reach and, in particular, the quantitative presentation of the results, allowing for statistical intra-site comparisons.
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Cover
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Title page
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Copyright page
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Of Related Interest
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Acknowledgements
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Contents
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List of Figures
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List of Tables
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Abstract
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1. Introduction
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1.1 Theoretical Pathways
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1.1.1 Object biography
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1.1.2 Contextual Archaeology
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1.2 Steps taken in this research
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Site types
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Find settings
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1.3 Recurring strands of significance
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1.4 Terms and limitations
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1.5 The significance of feet in other cultures
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1.6 Conclusions
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2. Ancient and modern attitudes to Roman feet and footwear
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2.1 Background to Roman footwear
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2.1.1 Classifying Roman footwear
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Carbatinae
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Caligae
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Calcei
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Soleae
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Socci
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Sculponeae
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Other Roman footwear
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2.1.2 Roman footwear fashion
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2.2 What the ancient Romans wrote
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2.3 An art-based approach
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2.4 Antiquarian footwear finds
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2.5 Some influential Roman calceologists
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2.6 Recent Roman shoe research
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2.7 Research into hobnailing
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2.8 Spiritual shoes
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2.9 Other foot-related research
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2.10 Conclusions
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3. The point of Roman hobnailing
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3.1 Background to Roman hobnailing
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3.2 The significance of Roman hobnailing for archaeologists
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3.2.1 Hobnailing as evidence of the wearers
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3.3 The significance of hobnailing for people in the Roman Empire
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3.3.1 Hobnailing and domination
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3.3.2 Nailing and fashion
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3.3.3 The cosmological side of hobnailing
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3.4 Hobnailing and group identity
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3.5 Hobnailing in iconography
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3.6 Conclusions
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4. The social significance of deposited Roman footwear
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4.1 The deposition of Roman footwear in graves
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4.1.1 Why deposit shoes in graves?
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4.2 The deposition of Roman footwear in wells
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4.2.1 Distinguishing deposits
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4.2.2 Evidence for the ritual deposition of Roman shoes in wells
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4.2.3 Roman beliefs and water
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4.2.4 Footwear and rituals surrounding the biography of Roman wells
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4.2.5 The ritual importance of left and right
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4.3 Why were shoes thought to be appropriate ritual deposits?
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4.4 Conclusions
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5. The ubiquity of Roman foot- and shoe-shaped artefacts
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5.1 Foot-shaped amulets
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5.2 Jugs with handles ending in feet
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5.3 Knife or razor handles in the shape of feet
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5.4 Furniture feet
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5.5 Flasks in the form of feet
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5.6 Conclusions
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6. Roman footlamps: a case study
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6.1 Methodology
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6.2 Background data
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6.3 Fashion and footwear style
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6.4 Hobnailing on Roman footlamps
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6.5 Patterns in ornamentation
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6.6 Footlamp distribution and socio-economic status
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6.7 The role of the army in footlamp distribution
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6.8 Footlamps and religion
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6.9 Footlamps and Christianity
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6.10 Footlamps and Graeco-Roman deities
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6.11 Magic footlamps?
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6.12 Funerary footlamps
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6.13 Conclusions
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7. Roman sandal fibulae: a case study
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7.1 Data sources for shoe brooches
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7.2 Typologies
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7.3 Numbers
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7.4 Chronological Distribution
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7.5 Spatial Distribution
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7.6 Distribution by site type and find setting
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7.7 How sandal fibulae were worn
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7.8 Left or right
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7.9 Ornamentation
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7.9.1 Hobnailing on sandal fibulae
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7.10 The apotropaic qualities of shoe brooches
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7.11 Sandal fibulae in funerary settings
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7.11.1 The data for funerary fibula finds
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7.12 Shoe brooches and religion
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7.12.1 Why were shoe brooches appropriate religious offerings?
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7.13 Conclusions
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8. The social significance of Roman footprints
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8.1 Footprints carved in stone
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8.2 Stamp matrices and seals in planta pedis
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8.3 Official planta pedis stamps in CBM
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8.4 Human footprints in Roman CBM
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8.5 Conclusions
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9. Assessing the significance of Roman statue foot-fragments from Britain
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9.1 Chronological and spatial distribution
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9.2 Material considerations
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9.3 For whom the foot fragments stand
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9.4 Distribution by site type and find setting
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9.5 Patterns of deposition
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9.6 Conclusions
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10. Discussion and Conclusions
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10.1 Chronological distribution
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10.2 Geographical distribution
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10.3 Distribution of site types and find settings
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10.4 The ritual significance of Roman representations of feet and footwear
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10.4.1 Foot-shaped artefacts found in sanctuaries
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10.4.2 Offerings in watery places
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10.4.3 Funerary feet and footwear
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10.5 Pars pro toto
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10.5.1 The feet of the gods
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10.6 Apotropaic feet
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10.6.1 The sinister side
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10.7 The importance of hobnailing
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10.8 How far evidence from ancient texts applied to the north-western provinces
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10.9 The limitations of this research
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10.10 Conclusions
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Bibliography
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Ancient Sources
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Modern Sources
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Citable Link
Published: 2024
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781407361543 (paper)
- 9781407361536 (ebook)
BAR Number: S3186