Romans loved to wear socks and sandals — could that be the reason for the massive shoes found at Magna fort?

Archaeologists aren't "baffled" by giant shoes but see them as a way to test different theories about how Roman soldiers coped with new environments along Hadrian's Wall.

Someone holding a roman shoes discovered at Magna Fort, a Roman fort located near Hadrian's Wall.
A leather boot was discovered at Magna Fort along Hadrian's Wall.
(Image credit: © The Vindolanda Trust)

Excavations at the Roman fort of Magna near Hadrian's Wall in Northumberland in north east England have uncovered some very large leather footwear. Their discovery, according to some news coverage, has "baffled" archaeologists.

The survival of the shoes is not by itself miraculous or unusual. Excellent preservation conditions caused by waterlogged environments with low-oxygen means that leather, and other organic materials, survive in the wet soil of this part of northern England.

Tim Penn
Lecturer in Roman and Late Antique Material Culture, University of Reading

Tim Penn is a Roman and late antique archaeologist. His research is driven by a desire to understand the everyday lives of people across the Roman Empire from the Late Republic to Late Antiquity. His research considers/explores Roman culture on multiple levels, from largescale landscape analysis through to site-level studies and the interrogation of individual objects, with the aim of understanding Roman daily life in its social context.

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