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  2. Shoemaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoemaking

    Woodcut of shoemakers from Frankfurt am Main, 1568. Two shoemakers in Vietnam in 1923. Shoemaking is the process of making footwear.. Originally, shoes were made one at a time by hand, often by groups of shoemakers, or cordwainers (sometimes misidentified as cobblers, who repair shoes rather than make them [citation needed]).

  3. Calceology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calceology

    Inuit boots and shoe-making tools on display at the Bata Shoe Museum, a museum of calceology in Canada. Calceology (from Latin calcei "shoes" and -λογία, -logiā, "-logy") is the study of footwear, especially historical footwear whether as archaeology, shoe fashion history, or otherwise. It is not yet formally recognized as a field of ...

  4. Shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoe

    The earliest known shoes are sagebrush bark sandals dating from approximately 7000 or 8000 BC, found in the Fort Rock Cave in the US state of Oregon in 1938. [5] The world's oldest leather shoe, made from a single piece of cowhide laced with a leather cord along seams at the front and back, was found in the Areni-1 cave complex in Armenia in 2008 and is believed to date to 3500 BC.

  5. Hanfu footwear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanfu_footwear

    The word xie (鞋) eventually replaced the word lü to become a general name for shoes. [2] Since the ancient times, Chinese shoes came in various kinds; there were leather shoes (made of tanbark and pelt), cloth shoes (made of silk, hemp, damask, brocade, and crepe), and straw shoes (made of leaves and stems of cattail, corn leaves, and kudzu ...

  6. Carbatina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbatina

    Carbatinae were seldom used even by poor Romans by the 3rd century, [11] by then having been replaced by shoes, slippers, boots, and other footwear. However, equivalent shoes continued to be worn by the ancient Germans, by the subjects of their successor states, and by the rural poor generally into the Middle Ages and Early Modern Period.

  7. Firms in India's ancient shoe capital squeezed by costs ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/firms-indias-ancient-shoe...

    Agra has been India's biggest shoe making centre since the Mughals ruled from the city centuries ago but Kumar's small businesses and thousands like it across the country now work on shrinking ...

  8. Turnshoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnshoe

    A turnshoe is a type of leather shoe that was used during the Middle Ages. It was so named because it was put together inside out, and then was turned right-side-out once finished: this hides the main seam between the sole and vamp—prolonging the life of the shoe [1] and inhibiting moisture leaking in through the seam.

  9. Ancient skeletons buried in shoes and jewels discovered ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/ancient-skeletons-buried-shoes...

    A two-year dig has unearthed an ancient necropolis near Rome containing 67 skeletons buried in 57 ornate tombs. Ancient skeletons buried in shoes and jewels discovered during building work Skip to ...