Socks are probably the oldest type of clothing that is still in use today in improved form. Long before the concept of wearing cloths, socks have been in use since the Store Ages. Going through the Stone Ages, cca. 500 BC, the ‘socks’ that our ancestors wore looked nothing like what we have today. Clues left behind of that age, from the cave paintings and archaeological remains, one finds that they seem like these socks were made from animal skins and pelts tied around the ankle. In the Greek poet Hesiod writings, in the 8th Century BC mention of socks are there. In his poem, “Works and Days”, Hesiod mentions, ‘piloi’, a type of sock made from matted animal hair worn under sandals. Romans, later on wrap their feet in strips of leather or woven fabric. Around the 2nd century AD, they started sewing the pieces of fabric together and making fitted socks and were called ‘udones’. They are the first socks to resemble what we are wearing these days.
The first woollen socks to be discovered were unearthed at
Vindolanda in Northumbria and they date back to the 2nd century AD. They are a
child-sized pair made from woven wool cloth meant to protect against the rough
British weather. Roman tablets found at the site even include the instruction
to “send more socks”.
Also around that
time, the first knit socks were being made in Ancient Egypt. The earliest known
surviving pair of knitted socks, made with a technique called naalbinding,
dates from 300 – 500 AD and was found at Oxyrhynchus on the Nile in Egypt. The
socks feature split toes and are designed to be worn with sandals.
By the 5th century
AD, holy people of Europe would wear socks called ‘puttees’ which symbolized purity.
A child’s woollen sock dating back to the 2nd century AD found at Vindolanda
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