Duckbill shoe

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Duckbill_shoe an entity of type: Thing

Der Kuhmaulschuh, auch Entenschnabel, Ochsen-, Kuhmaul oder Hornschuh genannt, ist eine Form des Schuhs, die im frühen 16. Jahrhundert in Europa von Männern und Frauen getragen wurde. Kuhmaulschuhe waren allerdings nur kurz in Mode. rdf:langString
A duckbill, bearpaw or cow's mouth was a style of shoe with a broad toe which was fashionable in the 15th and 16th centuries. This style started with Charles VIII of France, who had an extra toe, and was later worn by Henry VIII of England. It replaced the excessively long toe of the crakow but also tended to become impractical, as it became enlarged with stuffing and horns and so could be a foot wide, giving the wearer a waddling gait. It might also be adorned with slashes to show the fine lining and sumptuary laws were introduced to restrict all these excesses. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Kuhmaulschuh
rdf:langString Duckbill shoe
xsd:integer 55327521
xsd:integer 970873874
rdf:langString right
rdf:langString Children's shoes
rdf:langString Foot of Henry VIII
rdf:langString Foot of a statue of Mary Magdalene
<second> 1500.0
rdf:langString Duckbill shoes were worn by men, women, and children
rdf:langString Chausse et pied gauche de Sainte Marie-Madeleine, Belles du Nord, restauration PBALille 26 juillet 2016 Lamiot d 03.jpg
rdf:langString Henry VIII Ditchley Portrait after Holbein .png
rdf:langString Shoe_for_a_Child_MET_DP165966.jpg
rdf:langString Shoes MET 29.158.889.jpg
rdf:langString Shoes MET DP101959.jpg
xsd:integer 400 600
rdf:langString Der Kuhmaulschuh, auch Entenschnabel, Ochsen-, Kuhmaul oder Hornschuh genannt, ist eine Form des Schuhs, die im frühen 16. Jahrhundert in Europa von Männern und Frauen getragen wurde. Kuhmaulschuhe waren allerdings nur kurz in Mode.
rdf:langString A duckbill, bearpaw or cow's mouth was a style of shoe with a broad toe which was fashionable in the 15th and 16th centuries. This style started with Charles VIII of France, who had an extra toe, and was later worn by Henry VIII of England. It replaced the excessively long toe of the crakow but also tended to become impractical, as it became enlarged with stuffing and horns and so could be a foot wide, giving the wearer a waddling gait. It might also be adorned with slashes to show the fine lining and sumptuary laws were introduced to restrict all these excesses. There is a surviving design for a duckbill shoe by Albrecht Dürer; he describes it as made on an absolutely straight, symmetric last, and as having an entirely flat sole of two thicknesses of leather. They were also to have straps over the instep.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2432

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