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M., DW, Gary, M.--Thank you for spelling all that out. DW & Gary--As frustrating as it is, history only does a fair job of telling us "who", "what", and "when", but as basically a forensic science it does a poor job on the "why" questions. That's why the "whys" in history are frequently cast as very provisional theories--"the current evidence suggests that perhaps....", etc. With shoes we're really into the obscure thankfully, so there is little if any political agenda, but look at historical events like the sinking of the USS Maine. People[s] with "agendas" often latch onto historical events and co-opt them for political purposes, which makes getting at the [often boring] truth doubly difficult. In fashion-history there are many "drivers" behind why certain styles come and go; first as an outrage, then as all the rage, and finally as either a passing fad, or a "timeless classic". Until quite recently in the scheme of things culturally, people primarily dressed "up", that was the pattern, they aspired to emulating their social betters. During the periods under discussion in connection with heels, fashion usually ran from the top of society down. Styles were set by court dress--what the king and nobles wore, and what anyone wore if they went to "court" [not the legal kind--the kingly kind]. The most dramatic changes in European dress coincide with changing monarchs and their idiosyncrasies of court dress. I'll bet somewhere, some monarch popularized heels, and the die was cast. While I think M.'s onto something with these practical reasons--pavements, etc.--I think we need to add, too, that heels had to be popularized by the nobility, creating a market demand, hence the shoemakers went into high gear producing such things [for them], and of course the rising middle-class jumped on the band wagon buying cheaper knock-offs, and on down the ranks of society. Even if "heels", or these "proto-heels" M.'s on about, were born at the lower ranks of European society--the urban society who had to walk on the pavements was socially above the peasants out on the farms [yes/no?]--they probably still had to become "hot" at the top ranks, before they trickled down to all and sundry. No matter what their origins, probably the "reason" the man in the streets in London, Paris, or Berlin first adopted heeled shoes c.1590-1600 was because they had become the accepted fashion, were mass-produced in enough quantity to be available, and/or second-hand refurbished ones had turned up in the market stalls. The thing to guard against is this romantic notion of going to the shoemaker to have everything custom-made. Throughout most of history, most people in European cities bought most of their shoes ready-made--mass-produced. Even the Roman shoemakers complained to the government about the cheap imports flooding in from Greece, back BC. So, the wide-spread adoption of shoes with heels in Europe must coincide with the wide-spread mass-production of those shoes, and that kind of mass-production follows a lucrative market demand, not to mention the technical know-how to make them. Who or what group might create that kind of market demand?, etc. Another variable here, the "revolution" in shoemaking techniques that was taking place--the shift from turnshoes with their relative limited durability, and the limitation of thickness to enable them to be turned, to the stouter welted, "rightside-out" constructions. Heel-building technique c.1600-40ish was total chaos. Nobody "knew" the best way to build them or attach them just yet. The Elizabethan "slack heels": covered wood heel, but the quarters aren't attached to the bottoms, and other weird examples seem to suggest to me that the demand for heels had out-stripped the average shoemaker's ability to make such creations. The early high "spring heels": stacked leather wedges inserted under the continuous outsole--a bear to sew, and a misery to repair--finally gave way to the stacked leather heel we know, placed above the outsole, with more pegging than stitching eventually. From 1650 on, however, things found their own level, and the heels we know: covered wood "Louis"-type, stacked leather, and low wedge "spring-heels" settle nicely into orthodoxy.
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