The Areni-1 shoe is a 5,500-year-old
leather shoe that was found in 2008 in excellent condition in the
Areni-1 cave located in the
Vayots Dzor province of
Armenia
Armenia (), , group=pron officially the Republic of Armenia,, is a landlocked country in the Armenian Highlands of Western Asia.The UNbr>classification of world regions places Armenia in Western Asia; the CIA World Factbook , , and ...
.
It is a one-piece leather-hide shoe, the oldest piece of leather footwear in the world known to contemporary researchers. The discovery was made by an international team led by
Boris Gasparyan
Boris may refer to:
People
* Boris (given name), a male given name
*:''See'': List of people with given name Boris
* Boris (surname)
* Boris I of Bulgaria (died 907), the first Christian ruler of the First Bulgarian Empire, canonized after his d ...
, an archaeologist from the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography of the
National Academy of Sciences of Armenia (co-directors of the project are
Ron Pinhasi from
University College Cork in
Ireland, and
Gregory Areshian from
UCLA).
Discovery
An Armenian post-graduate student,
Diana Zardaryan, discovered the leather shoe in the course of excavations by a team of archeologists from Armenia’s
Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, Ireland and the United States.
[''Oldest Leather Shoe A ‘Dream’ Find For Armenian Scientist''](_blank)
Armenia Liberty ( RFE/RL), June 12, 2010. The shoe was found upside down at the base of a shallow, rounded, and plastered pit that was deep and wide, beneath an overturned broken
Chalcolithic
The Copper Age, also called the Chalcolithic (; from grc-gre, χαλκός ''khalkós'', " copper" and ''lÃthos'', " stone") or (A)eneolithic (from Latin ''aeneus'' "of copper"), is an archaeological period characterized by regul ...
ceramic bowl.
A broken pot and goat horns also were found nearby. Excavations in the same area also found
the world's oldest wine-making site.
The research was funded by the
National Geographic Society, the
Chitjian Foundation, the
Gfoeller Foundation, the
Steinmetz Family Foundation, the
Boochever Foundation and the
Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at
UCLA. The team's findings were published on June 9, 2010, in the journal ''
PLOS One''.
Analysis
The shoe was found in near-perfect condition due to the cool and dry conditions in the cave and a thick layer of sheep dung which acted as a solid seal. Large storage containers were found in the same cave, many of which held well-preserved wheat, barley, and
apricot
An apricot (, ) is a fruit, or the tree that bears the fruit, of several species in the genus ''Prunus''.
Usually, an apricot is from the species '' P. armeniaca'', but the fruits of the other species in ''Prunus'' sect. ''Armeniaca'' are also ...
s, as well as other edible plants.
The shoe contained grass and the archaeologists were uncertain as to whether this was because the grass was used as insulation to keep the foot warm, or used to preserve the shape of the shoe while not being worn. Lead archaeologist Ron Pinhasi could not determine whether the shoe belonged to a man or a woman. While small, approximately a woman's U.S. and Canada size 7, European size 37, or UK size 6, he stated that "the shoe could well have fitted a man from that era".
The
shoe laces were preserved as well.
Major similarities exist between the manufacturing technique and style of one-piece leather-hide shoes discovered across Europe and the one reported from Areni-1 Cave, suggesting that shoes of this type were worn for millennia across a large and environmentally diverse geographic region.
According to Pinhasi, the Areni-1 shoe is similar to the Irish ''
pampootie'', a shoe style worn in the
Aran Islands up to the 1950s. The shoes are very similar to the traditional shoes of the Balkans, still seen today in festivals, known as
Opanci (''Opanke'').
National Geographic: ''World's Oldest Leather Shoe Found—Stunningly Preserved''
/ref>
When the material was dated by the two radiocarbon laboratories in Oxford and California, it was established that the shoe dates back to 3,500 B.C. This date is some two hundred years older than the date given for the leather shoe found on Ötzi the Iceman.
After having been treated for preservation, the Areni-1 shoe is on display at the History Museum of Armenia, Yerevan.
See also
* Areni-1 winery
References
{{footwear, state=uncollapsed
Copper Age Asia
Archaeological artifacts
Leather clothing
Historical footwear
2008 archaeological discoveries
Archaeology of Armenia
Areni