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  2. Patten (shoe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patten_(shoe)

    Pattens were worn during the Middle Ages outdoors, and in public places, over (outside of) the thin soled shoes of that era. Pattens were worn by both men and women during the Middle Ages, and are especially seen in art from the 15th century; a time when poulaines—shoes with very long, pointed toes—were particularly in fashion.

  3. Poulaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poulaine

    A woodcut of Kraków (Latin: Cracovia) in Poland from the 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle. The usual English name poulaine [1] [2] (/ p u ˈ l eɪ n /) is a borrowing and clipping of earlier Middle French soulers a la poulaine ("shoes in the Polish fashion") from the style's supposed origin in medieval Poland. [3]

  4. The pointy-shoed corruption of medieval London - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/pointy-shoed-corruption...

    Shoes seen as demonic and vain were blamed for making men "effeminate" and bringing the plague to London. ... was one that arose in medieval times. Fashionable pointy-toed shoes called poulaines ...

  5. Chopine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chopine

    Their popularity in Spain was so great that the larger part of the country's cork supplies went towards production of the shoes. Some argue that the style originated in Spain, [9] as there are many extant examples and a great amount of pictorial and written reference going back to the 14th century. Chopines of the Spanish style were more often ...

  6. Pigache - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigache

    Priestly Byzantine Egyptian footwear (5th–8th cent.), sometimes conflated with the later pigaches Fulk, King Philip, Bertha, and Bertrade, from the Chronicle of St Denis (14th cent.) The English name pigache was borrowed from French , where the name was originally used for a kind of hoe and as a hunting term for a wild boar hoofprint longer ...

  7. Geta (footwear) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geta_(footwear)

    Geta-style shoes were worn in Southern China likely until sometime between the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing dynasties (1636/1644–1912), when they were replaced by other types of footwear. [ 2 ] It is likely that geta originated from Southern China and were later exported to Japan.

  8. Episcopal sandals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Episcopal_sandals

    Episcopal sandals, also known as pontifical sandals, are a Catholic pontifical vestment worn by bishops when celebrating liturgical functions according to the pre–Vatican II rubrics, for example a Tridentine Solemn Pontifical Mass.

  9. Sandals of Jesus Christ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandals_of_Jesus_Christ

    The sandals are the remains of an ornate fabric shoe (slipper) allegedly given to the Abbey by Pepin the Short in the Carolingian period (7th to 9th centuries). [1]They are mentioned by Pepin in the deed of 762, and he is said to have received them from Rome as a gift of Pope Stephen II.