21 votes

Ordering off a 5,000-year-old Mesopotamian menu

2 comments

  1. [2]
    DesktopMonitor
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    The interior shot from the article got me thinking… did people really leave their footwear on indoors back in Mesopotamia?

    The interior shot from the article got me thinking… did people really leave their footwear on indoors back in Mesopotamia?

    4 votes
    1. cfabbro
      Link Parent
      You got me curious so I did some digging: https://www.encyclopedia.com/fashion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/mesopotamian-footwear

      You got me curious so I did some digging:

      As civilizations developed in Mesopotamia between 3000 and 300 b.c.e., foot coverings became more important. From the earliest times to about 911 b.c.e., the available evidence indicates that the people who lived in Mesopotamia, the region between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in present-day Iraq, went without any footwear at all. Even though these people had developed needles for sewing garments, looms for weaving, and the skills to make beautiful gold jewelry, they worked, entertained, worshiped, and went to war with unadorned bare feet. Statues of kings and queens in elaborately fringed outfits and carefully styled hair show these people without shoes.

      The first depictions of people wearing foot coverings appear between 911 and 612 b.c.e. during the time of Assyrian rule. Although no samples of Assyrian footwear have been discovered, sculptures, statues, and bas-reliefs, or wall carvings, on the ruins of palace walls show men wearing sandals for some occasions, women in slippers with toe coverings, and warriors wearing boots with laces tied below the knee. Not until 550 to 330 b.c.e., when the Persians ruled, was footwear common. Regrettably, almost nothing is known about the details of how these shoes were made.

      https://www.encyclopedia.com/fashion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/mesopotamian-footwear

      8 votes