Who Wore High-Heeled Shoes First? - podcast episode cover

Who Wore High-Heeled Shoes First?

Oct 04, 20196 min
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Episode description

Although shoes with high heels are often coded feminine in modern culture, men wore them first -- military men, specifically. Learn the history of high heels in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff Lauren boge obam here. Although these days wearing shoes with high heels is mostly coded feminine, the original wears of high heels were men. So what's the history here? When, where, and why did people first begin wearing shoes with elevated heels. We spoke via email with Elizabeth Semmelhawk, senior curator at Toronto's Bata Shoe Museum, who says she has yet to unravel this mystery. The exact origin of high heels remains

to be discovered. What's clear, however, is that high heels were not a European invention. Heeled footwear only emerged in Western Europe around the turn of the seventeenth century, but had been warned for hundreds of years prior throughout Western Asia. Similhawks said evidence for early Western Asian heels as far back as tenth century Persia suggests a strong relationship to horseback riding and may have been connected to the innovation

of the stirrup. The store Up family changed horseback riding and in particular made military campaigns on horseback more effective, as it enabled riders to study themselves and dramatically improved the effective use of weapons such as the lance and bow and arrow. The heel seems to have been a further development of this technology, as it allowed the wearer to hook his feet in the stirrups that are anchoring

him to his steed. Eventually, healed footwear for men spread to Europe, likely through political networks and trade, but the

exact evolution is complicated. So why did heel's only become of interest to Europeans around the beginning of the sixteen hundreds, Semmelhack said The answer lies in things as complex as European world exploration and the destabilizing of the textile trade, to the rise of Persia under the reign of shah Abbus the first from fight to sixteen twenty nine, and both Persian and European concerns about the increasingly powerful Ottoman Empire.

In particular, it was the power of shot a Bus, the first Mountain military who wore healed footwear, that may have made heels appealing first to European men and ultimately to women. As the heel entered into upper classmen's fashion, there was a concurrent trend in women's fashion to adopt

certain aspects of men's attire. Samahawks said that the women who played with this trend were often quote the butt of ridicule, and their numerous offenses included their adoption of men's military inspired fashion, including broad brimmed hats, ornamented with plumes, doublets, carrying weapons, and wearing heels. The heels that both men and women wore in the early years of the seventeenth century were very low, but they would rise for both

sexes as the century progressed. The majority of powerful and privileged men wore heels through the seventeenth century and into the early eighteenth century. In France, during the reign of Louis the fourteenth from sixteen forty three to seventeen fifteen, wearing red high heels was a principal signifier of political privilege,

limited to the king and his courtiers. Beyond France, red heels for men were at first associated with French sophistication, but by the end of the seventeenth century they were increasing he seen as a feminate, especially in England, Samahawks said, fueled by nascent Enlightenment thinking and increasing nationalisms, men's dress began to undergo a radical transformation at the end of

the seventeenth century. It was in the early eighteenth century that men abandoned the heel to women's fashions and the heel became a signifier of femininity. Those shifts included a heightened division between men's and women's attire, as well as march differences between French and English men's dress. Samahawk said since the seventeenth century, Western culture has shown extreme sensitivity to men in heels, especially if it's deemed that the

heels are being used to increase height. She notes that this negative view only increased when Darwinian ideas of survival of the fittest became translated into racist and sexist notions of natural male physical and mental superiority. But heels for men made a brief comeback in the middle of the twentieth century. Samahak explained the heel began rising in men's fashion in the nineteens sixties, and in the early nineteen seventies it reached unprecedented heights in direct response, I feel,

to the burgeoning women's movement. The heels and men's fashion, however, were not borrowed from the female wardrobe. They were blocky and high like Louis the fourteenth and were touted as a way of increasing one stature, masculinity, and confidence. In no way did they reference the long standing feminine high and thin heel. These days, however, heels on men can be construed to emphasize a lack of height rather than compensating for it, which means quote that heals on men

function like a bad to pay. They reveal insecurity, and that in our current culture is deemed unappealing. Iconic footwear designer Christian Lubaton concurred to a news publication a man in heels. That's a prosthesis. But I sympathize the men need help, But a man in heels is ridiculous. Clearly Mr Lubaton doesn't watch the Cowboy channel. Those bronch and bull writers look pretty good. Or, as semel Hack puts it, cowboys continue to own their heels and wear them with confidence.

Today's episode was written by Carrie Tatro and produced by Tyler Clang. Brain Stuff is a production of I Heart Radio's How Stuff Works. For more in this and lots of other topics, visit our home planet, how stuff Works dot com and for our podcast to My Heart radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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