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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Sandals for the living, sandals for the dead: 262Roman children and their footwear
Ist Teil von
  • Shoes, Slippers and Sandals, 2019, p.261-282
Auflage
1
Ort / Verlag
Routledge
Erscheinungsjahr
2019
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • It has long been noticed that, generally speaking, children wore the same footwear as adults in ancient Roman times. This chapter assumes that shoes were considered not just a bare necessity for the living but were attributed a special meaning for the dead. In figural representations and written sources Roman children are not always depicted realistically. There are likewise many images, mainly on sepulchral monuments, that put the child in some other context. There, the child in question is shown wearing garments and footwear that do not match his age and/or status. It is clear that children’s shoes are much more than a snapshot of real life and make reference to a particular status in society. Often they have a special meaning, pointing to something the child might have attained had he or she survived into adulthood. Yet shoes may also indicate cult and religion; the concept of monosandalism will be explored in this context. The significance of children’s sandals in mourning scenes on Roman sarcophagi will also be considered. There, the slippers of the child (lying in state) are put on a low footstool. This motif is known from sarcophagi for deceased women, but never appears on monuments for men – although we know that men likewise wore these shoes. The slippers are no mere accessory but an important iconographic element that sometimes even replaces the depiction of the deceased. In the case of girls, the motif may even hint at the bridal shoes, the socci lutei. Archaeological finds support this discussion: the material discovered so far indicates that children were sometimes not only inhumed/cremated fully dressed and wearing shoes, but were given shoes as burial gifts. These shoes were not necessarily the footwear the deceased had worn during his/her lifetime but were produced solely for the purpose of becoming grave goods. It has been noticed that children wore the same footwear as adults in ancient Roman times. This chapter assumes that shoes were considered not just a bare necessity for the living but were attributed a special meaning for the dead. Often children’s shoes pointed to something the child might have attained had he or she survived into adulthood. The chapter explores the concept of monosandalism in the context that shoes may also indicate cult and religion. Roman children, as a general rule, wore the same footwear as adults but were often shown wearing shoes that served to stress a particular status, for example as a knight or a member of a religious community. The chapter also examines the significance of children’s sandals in mourning scenes on Roman sarcophagi. When children's shoes form part of a military attire, they prospectively hint at what the child might have achieved if death had not cut its life short.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 1472488768, 9781472488763
DOI: 10.4324/9780429487699-13
Titel-ID: cdi_informaworld_taylorfrancisbooks_10_4324_9780429487699_13_version2
Format

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