Ankle band: 35 cm x 6.5 cm
Toe band: 2.8 cm wide
Foil thickness: .2 mm
Very thin gold foil ornaments in the form of slender strips
were sewn onto the leather (probably -- none is preserved) of
the shoes. The horseshoe shape of the toe bands was made by
connecting two asymmetrically curved bands with a small piece of
foil; the toes of the shoes undoubtedly pointed upward.
The design is worked in repoussée in three registers. These
are separated by groups of two horizontal ridges, a common motif
in the Hochdorf tomb. However, the rest of the ornament is
remarkably different. Instead oflong, uninterrupted horizontal
rows of discrete shapes seen on the other gold foil ornaments,
such as the belt
cover, the neck
ring(right) or the dagger cover, the shoe foils divide the
registers into vertical and diagonal fields. The most common
Hochdorf motif, the concentric circles or hollow ring, appears
on the shoes as well, but here they are not simply lined up, as
on the gold armband or
drinking horn foils,
but are arranged in complex patterns.
The toe bands feature a wide central register flanked by two
very narrow rows of "Z"-shapes. The central ornament consists of
two rows of three ridges, each arranged as opposed zig-zags
which intersect so that diamond-shaped fields are formed. There
is a "donut" at the center of each framed diamond; small
dart-shaped punches surmounted by two short ridges truncate the
triangular fields outside the diamonds.
The same pattern, without the "Z" border, is repeated along
the top and bottom of the ankle bands. In between, square fields
or metopes are separated by vertical rows of concentric rings
flanked by three parallel ridges. The square fields are
subdivided by a central diamond. In addition, diagonal lines
bisect the triangular areas outside the diamonds and divide the
diamonds into four smaller diamonds, each with its concentric
ring.
The patterns on the shoe foils thus resemble the other gold
foil in the tomb less than they do the textile patterns, which also consist chiefly of
chevron or diamond-shaped fields and diagonal patterns. Perhaps
Hallstatt-period shoes were embroidered or woven, and the foils
imitate shoe patterns, or perhaps the chieftain's shoes were
simple and unadorned. In any case, the shoe foils are clear
examples of gold ornamental additions fashioned specifically for
the tomb and not used in life, a part of the burying group's
project of covering the chieftain with gold literally from top
to toe.
It is interesting to note that the ornaments (and presumably
shoe) for the right foot were put on the left foot, and vice
versa.