Description
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.
AUTHOR
Elizabeth Shaw came late to Roman archaeology following a career in language teaching. She has previously published several journal articles. This book follows PhD research carried out at Newcastle University as part of her PhD project.
REVIEW
‘The data that have been collected for the study is truly impressive. The novelty lies in the combination of data of real footwear with the data of representations of foot and footwear on artefacts, which has not been attempted before. The final corpora would be therefore of extreme value to those studying body, body parts and embodiment in the Roman Empire.’ Dr Tatiana Ivleva, Newcastle University
‘A valuable contribution drawing together a great variety of material. I think every material specialist will make grateful use of this enormous - and quantified - corpus.’ Dr Carol van Driel-Murray, University of Leiden