The curious origin of the high heel

Brian G Turner

Fantasist & Futurist
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Nov 23, 2002
Messages
26,431
Location
UK
I did not know the high heel developed from horse riding. :)

 
Oliver Cromwell: not big on Christmas, very big on thigh-length high heeled boots.

I think women had high platform shoes earlier: there were shoes called Chopines in the Renaissance that could be very high, but didn't have raised heels. I think they were to keep your feet out of the dirt, rather like the wooden platform flip flop type sandals worn in Japan.
 
Last edited:
Explains the cowboy boot.
I remember in the 1970s reading a good number of the J.T Edson books about cowboy Dusty Fog and his partners.

In a few of them it mentioned the high heel Western boots they wore, both to keep in the stirrups and also to help if they lassoed on foot, they could then dig their heels in to hold on to the cow (or horse if they were getting their mount for the day from the paddock)
 
To stop your foot slipping through the stirrup and you being dragged if you fall off. I knew from the hour a week at the riding school when I was a kid, as your footwear was policed for safety reasons and no plimsoles permitted as no heel.

I remember Dusty Fog - don't think I could read it now.

Chopines evolved from pattens, which were strap on thick wooden soles for street wear to lift your nice shoes and skirt hem above the literal sh*t in the street. Though Queen Henrietta Maria (Charles 1 Queen) was known for wearing high rise shoes at all times as she was on the short side.

Older high heeled shoes - 18th century - were worn by gentlemen as much as ladies and there was no reinforcement of the arch especially with metal as there is on modern shoes, so if you strode along heel-toe, you snapped your expensive shoe. A careful somewhat mincing toe first gait was preferred. Also you had to move like a dancer as that showed your genteel status as well. "Point those toes children" floats back into my mind.

Went round a stately home recently and a design of chair was pointed out by the guide, which had big gaps in the back - to allow gentleman to whoosh the tails of their coat through it, so they hung nicely and didn't get creased.

And wandering further off topic - documentary on Handel's Messiah last year, the first performance was a serious sell-out, so to provide plenty of seating and space, gentlemen were asked to not wear swords and ladies not to wear the large hoop supported skirts.
 
Last edited:

Back
Top