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Why Were Medieval Europeans So Obsessed With Long, Pointy Shoes?
Atlas Obscura ^ | 5/22/19 | Sabrina Imbler

Posted on 06/08/2019 1:59:24 PM PDT by LibWhacker

Why Were Medieval Europeans So Obsessed With Long, Pointy Shoes?

Going to foolish lengths for fashion.

At a royal Parisian wedding the standard footwear was very pointy.At a royal Parisian wedding the standard footwear was very pointy. Christophel Fine Art/UIG via Getty Images

In 1463, London outlawed the shoes of its fanciest men. These dapper lords had grown ridiculous in their dapperness, and had taken to ambling streets shod in long, carrot-shaped shoes that tapered to impish tips, some as long as five inches beyond the toe. These shoes were called “crakows” or “poulaines” (a term also used to refer to the tips alone), and the court of King Edward IV eventually found them offensive enough to pass a sumptuary law prohibiting shoe tips that extended over two inches beyond the toe.

Perhaps one of the silliest and most fascinating trends in medieval fashion, these shoes probably first emerged around 1340 in Krakow, Poland—both names refer to this origin—according to Rebecca Shawcross, the author of Shoes: An Illustrated History. Shawcross also serves as the shoe resources officer at Northampton Museum and Art Gallery in England, which claims to have the world’s largest collection of shoes (at 12,000 pairs, but alas, just one intact pair of poulaines).

Europe had flirted with long-toed footwear since the 1200s, but never to this length, or with this saturation. The lords and, to a lesser extent, ladies of 15th-century Europe wore these shoes almost exclusively for over a century. Every person who could afford shoes wore poulaines, though the longer tips were generally reserved for nobility who could afford to wander around in footwear seemingly designed for pratfalls.This poulaine, uncovered on the Thames, features an ankle strap and a sexy, plunging front. This poulaine, uncovered on the Thames, features an ankle strap and a sexy, plunging front. Museum of London

For the glitterati of medieval Europe, poulaines were less a fad than a symbol. “If you were a man of status and you had enough wealth, you wanted to show that off,” Shawcross says. “And to do that, you had to take the toe to the extreme.” Shoes with absurdly long toes were expensive and would clearly impair the wearer from efficiently partaking in any kind of physical labor. So they were also an indicator of leisure and luxury, free of extraneous effort or the tyranny of practicality.

Poulaines—like babies or uncorseted bosoms—could not support themselves. In order to keep the tips erect, medieval shoemakers stuffed them with soft organic material, often moss, hair, or wool. “Without a stuffed toe, it gets quite floppy,” Shawcross says. “It doesn’t look like it would have been worn by someone of status at all.” The material also helped prevent the tip of the poulaine from curling when wet, according to Jackie Keily, senior curator at the Museum of London, which boasts one of the most impressive collections of poulaines. One shoe in particular, recovered from an archaeological excavation on the waterfront, boasts a modest tip but a delicate leaf pattern.The tip length of poulaines varied, and some sported intricate decoration.The tip length of poulaines varied, and some sported intricate decoration. Museum of London

Another surviving example Shawcross mentions includes an uncomfortable-looking hunk of whalebone used as a stiffener (also a feature of high-end corsetry). Poulaines also had a sort of sex appeal, being cut to show off the colored hose around a lord’s ankle—considered quite sexy at the time. “It’s a time when tunics are getting shorter and young men would have been showing off their legs,” Keily says. “So low-cut shoes would have accentuated and elongated the leg, all down to that long point.”

Most poulaines that survive today were made of leather, but medieval Europeans would have used every possible fabric, Keily says. The upper echelons of society, for example, used embroidered textiles, velvets, and silks. Such shoes might be hand-painted or etched with intricate patterns. Though these opulent poulaines appear in many medieval paintings, no actual examples survive. The Museum of London has some of the fanciest known poulaines in its collection, all remarkably preserved by the saturated mud of the River Thames.This rather extreme example would have been worn by a very wealthy man. This rather extreme example would have been worn by a very wealthy man. Museum of London

Poulaines stand out even more because medieval fashion was often governed by clean lines and a practical, chaste minimalism, Shawcross says. (Poulaines also marked a rare period in history when men’s fashion outshone women’s in terms of sheer frill, according to Keily.) Perhaps the best explanation for this confounding flamboyance is that the shoes emerged soon after the Black Death killed 30 to 60 percent of the population of Europe. “It may have been a reaction to a type of austerity,” Keily says. “The plague left a landscape with a lot of people who had lost close family members, a generation of mourning. Suddenly there were less people who had more money to spend on clothing.” So poulaines may have been a kind of retail therapy for coping with the surprise disappearance of 25 million people. Keily points to other fashion trends that followed widespread losses of life, such as the conspicuous designs that emerged in the 1950s and 1960s, following World War II.

By today’s standards, poulaines were a long-lived fad. But Shawcross says medieval trends often lasted for a century or more, due to the slow, protracted passage of culture across towns and countries, in the absence of any widely distributed media. Until the 18th century, fashions emerged at the top of society and then slowly trickled down, class by class, often taking years to reach rural areas.A detail of a 15th-century illuminated manuscript shows servers and their pointy, pointy poulaines.A detail of a 15th-century illuminated manuscript shows servers and their pointy, pointy poulaines. Wikimedia/Public Domain

Eventually, the English crown felt the need to intervene, in part because of the lascivious connotations that the increasingly extended toe-tips carried. “People thought the longer the toe, the more masculine the wearer,” Shawcross says. “But some people weren’t keen on that connotation.” Parliament equated wearing the shoes to public indecency, and stepped forward to put limits on a variety of racy fashions: “No person under the estate of lord, including knights, esquires, and gentlemen, to wear any gown, jacket, or coat which does not cover the genitals and buttocks. Also not to wear any shoes or boots with pikes longer than two inches. No tailor to make such a short garment, or stuffed doublet, and no shoemaker to make such pikes,” the 1463 law reads. The only other city known to have taken a stand against the shoes was Paris, which had banned them in 1368.

It was a fashion, and fashions come and go. By 1475, the poulaine had vanished, Shawcross says. Under the reign of King Henry VIII, European footwear made a hard pivot into the wide, box-toed shoes. In response, England later passed sumptuary laws restricting the width of these blocky shoes. “The king had men who would go around trying to catch people, measuring the width of their toes,” Shawcross says.

Pointy men’s shoes had a surprise reprise in England in the 1950s, with the nattily named winklepicker. Though far less extreme than the most dramatic poulaines, winklepicker wearers also stuffed the toes of their shoes with cotton or tissue paper to keep their tips aloft—like medieval lords. The style has had several revivals over the ensuing decades, and luckily for the British music scene, parliament has yet to make an official statement on winklepickers.



TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: fashion; godsgravesglyphs; medieval; middleages; pointy; poulaines; renaissance; roachinthecorner; shoes
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To: LibWhacker

As first guess, for the same reason men wore codpieces to enhance their nether region.


41 posted on 06/08/2019 3:26:35 PM PDT by bgill (when you badmouth women, you are badmouthing your mama and the good women on FR)
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To: a fool in paradise

Only two posts.

FReepers rock.

5.56mm


42 posted on 06/08/2019 3:28:12 PM PDT by M Kehoe (DRAIN THE SWAMP! BUILD THE WALL!)
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To: SkyDancer
#30: "And in today’s western fashion there are cowboy boots with long curled (whatever you’d call them) at the toe. What’s with that?"

From the same culture that brought you zoot suits, and low riders, and cholos.
 

43 posted on 06/08/2019 3:29:10 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie (September 11, 2001 : Never forget, never forgive.)
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To: LibWhacker

To scratch themselves or to trip people.


44 posted on 06/08/2019 3:34:04 PM PDT by EdnaMode
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To: PUGACHEV

I knew THOSE had to show up.


45 posted on 06/08/2019 3:53:48 PM PDT by knarf
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To: LibWhacker

46 posted on 06/08/2019 4:04:46 PM PDT by Phil DiBasquette
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To: PUGACHEV

How weird.


47 posted on 06/08/2019 4:05:46 PM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: LibWhacker

There are times, my friend, when a good cigar is just a smoke......


48 posted on 06/08/2019 4:30:10 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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To: Al Hitan

Can you go skiing on those?


49 posted on 06/08/2019 4:31:36 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Denounce DUAC - The Democrats Un-American Activists Committee)
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To: LibWhacker

Helps to lead the shoe up the a$$ when you’re doing serious kicking.


50 posted on 06/08/2019 4:32:13 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not Averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: SkyDancer

“Do they serve a function??”

Scaling fine-mesh (border) fences.


51 posted on 06/08/2019 4:36:20 PM PDT by PLMerite ("They say that we were Cold Warriors. Yes, and a bloody good show, too." - Robert Conquest)
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To: LibWhacker
Check out these guys' shoes.

Leningrad Cowboys Performing Sweet Home Alabama

52 posted on 06/08/2019 4:38:02 PM PDT by HotHunt (Been there. Done that.)
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To: Yardstick
Oh, very classy! It wasn't until I started reading styleforum.net that I discovered just how classy Allen Edmunds was, and how far short of the mark I fell... Hint: Way, way short!

An Allen Edmunds gallery (hundreds of pages long!) on styleforum.net

53 posted on 06/08/2019 4:57:46 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: PUGACHEV

When you got extra drug money to spend on, out the pointy shoes and 22 in rims... bling


54 posted on 06/08/2019 4:59:49 PM PDT by JudgemAll (Democrats Fed. job-security in hatse:hypocrites must be gay like us or be tested/crucified)
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To: LibWhacker

LOL — I totally hear you.

I never thought it could happen to me but I’ve become a shoe junkie.

My trick is to buy nice shoes on eBay for a fraction of the new cost. I keep about a dozen nice pairs in my closet.

But there’s no doubt — once you’ve experience true nice shoes, there’s no going back.


55 posted on 06/08/2019 5:37:03 PM PDT by Yardstick
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To: Yardstick
*experienced
56 posted on 06/08/2019 5:39:09 PM PDT by Yardstick
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To: dfwgator

For your weekend enjoyment.

57 posted on 06/08/2019 5:40:50 PM PDT by Tijeras_Slim
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To: Tijeras_Slim

Great album.


58 posted on 06/08/2019 5:41:46 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: SkyDancer

Current western fashion in this country heavily favors square toed boots. I hate them and prefer a roper (rounded) toe. We certainly don’t wear curly, pointy toed boots.


59 posted on 06/08/2019 7:16:01 PM PDT by Himyar (Comes A Stillness)
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To: Fiddlstix

Thank you. That was hilarious!


60 posted on 06/08/2019 7:22:52 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Carbon Dioxide: the Green Planet Elixer.)
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