Tag: Oldest

World’s Oldest Leather Shoe Discovered in Armenia

armenian shoe cave - oldest leather shoeA 5,500-year-old leather shoe has been found in a cave in Armenia. The shoe 1,000 years older than Giza’s Great Pyramid and 400 years older than Stonehenge is perfectly preserved and was found complete with shoelaces. It is believed to be the oldest example of enclosed leather footwear, out-dating the shoes worn by Otzi the Iceman by a few hundred years.

The shoe is sole-less, made out of a single piece of cow hide and was shaped to the wearer’s right foot. It contained grass, which might have served to either keep the foot warm or to maintain the shape of the shoe. It is not known whether the shoe 24.5cm long and a European size 37 belonged to a man or a woman, though it would have been ideal for a male of that era.

The shoe is similar to the ‘pampootsies’ worn until the 1950s on Irelands Aran Islands. In fact, enormous similarities exist between manufacturing technique and style of this shoe and those found across Europe at later periods, suggesting that this type of shoe was worn for thousands of years across a large and environmentally diverse geographic region, said Dr Ron Pinhasi of Cork University.

We couldn’t believe the discovery. The crusts had sealed the artefacts and archaeological deposits and artefacts remained fresh dried, just like they were put in a can.

Such a well-preserved artifact from a Middle Eastern archaeological site is considered an amazing find because organic materials usually deteriorate due to the high content of salts and fungi in the soil, as well as fluctuations in temperature and humidity.

The discovery was made in Vayotz Dzor province on Armenias border with Iran and Turkey by Diana Zardaryan of Armenias Institute of Archaeology. I was amazed to find that even the shoelaces were preserved, she said.

The stable, cool and dry conditions in the Areni-1cave resulted in the exceptional preservation of the shoe and other objects. Other finds included large containers, many of which held well-preserved wheat, barley, apricots and other edible foodstuffs.

Click the images to see them inlarge size

A thick layer of sheep dung covered the floor of the cave, sealing the artefacts and archaeological deposits and further assisting preservation. Other discoveries included a broken pot, fishbones and sheep’s horns.

We couldn’t believe the discovery, said the dig’s co-director Gregory Areshian, part of an international team of archaeologists working at the site. The crusts had sealed the artefacts and archaeological deposits and artefacts remained fresh dried, just like they were put in a can.

Both the shoe and the grass samples were shown to be the same age, and dated to the Chalcolithic period, about 3500BC.

While the Armenian discovery is believed to be the oldest recorded example of a leather shoe and the oldest Eurasian shoe it is not the oldest known footwear. Predating the shoe by as many as 2,000 years are a moccasin made of plant material and a pair of leather sandals discovered in the 1970s in a cave in Missouri.

Leather sandals of a similar age to the Areni-1 shoe were found in a cave in Israels Judean Desert but these were never directly dated. Rather, their age is based on various other associated artefacts found in the Cave of the Warriors.

The archaeologists have not yet identified the purpose of the cave.”We know that there are children’s graves at the back of the cave but so little is known about this period that we cannot say with any certainty why all these different objects were found together,” said Dr Pinhasi.The international team will continue to excavate the many chambers of the cave.

The same team last year announced the find ofthe ‘world’s oldest human brain’ at the Areni-1 site, a 9 by 7 centimetres brain fragment, possible evidence of ceremonial cannibalism as well as a large number of vessels and grapevine shoots (possibly the ‘world’s oldest commercial winery’).

Further details on the study of the Areni-1shoeare published in the online scientific journal PloS ONE as First Direct Evidence of Chalcolithic Footwear from the Near Eastern Highlands.

Ashmolean, World’s Oldest Museum, Reopening this Weekend

The Ashmolean Museum

The oldest museum in the world reopens its doors tomorrow, after a mammoth five-year revamp. Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum has enjoyed a 61million cash injection into its ageing building, recasting all but its Victorian Cockerell building facade. Rick Mather’s new creation allows the museum’s myriad treasures much more space, adding 39 galleries and 10,000sq metres of exhibition space.

The museum, founded in 1683, has been closed to the public since December last year, as the final pieces have been put in place. Funding has come from a number of high-profile sources, including the Heritage Lottery Fund, Linbury Trust (Lord Sainsbury’s charity) and Oxford Thinking; a campaign for the University of Oxford. Fans can have their name inscribed on the museum’s ‘Benefactor Bridge’ for 50 each, and some galleries have already been sponsored: Saudi Prince Sultan bin Abdul-Aziz Al-Saud is patron of the Islamic Arts collection.

“Rick Mather made very good use of space,” says museum director Dr Christopher Brown. “Such a large undertaking meant that we could think anew about how to display the collection.”

Three thousand object mounts have been created, lit by 1,370 new spotlights. The museum’s curators hope its cutting-edge design will allow visitors to see its many wonderful objects in the context of the culture to which they belonged. The Ashmolean strives to show the progression through human history. Visitors can walk through Greece and Rome through to the Near East and India. The museum’s ancient highlights include Egyptian mummy portraits, a 9,000 year-old skull from Jericho and the Anglo-Saxon Alfred Jewel. The museum has endured some

39 galleries, 10,000sq metres, 3,000 object mounts, 1,370 spotlights. It’s a mammoth overhaul.

scandal recently, as Egypt’s Supreme Council of Anitiquities suspended its excavations over allegedly ‘stolen’ artefacts.

The Ashmolean was founded 326 years ago by revered antiquary Elias Ashmole, after its first five-year construction. It is the world’s oldest public museum, beating Florence’s Uffizi (built in 1581 but not then publicly open) by 82 years. Its last development came in 1845, when its much-loved main building was commissioned by Charles Cockerell. Much of the museum’s celebrated Minoan and Greek collection came from the expeditions of archaeologistArthur Evans, famous for his discovery of Crete’s Palace of Knossos. The Ashmolean houses some of the world’s greatest ancient treasures. Only time can tell if its latest chapter proves as successful as its past.

Look out for an interview with Ashmolean curator Dr Jack Green on Heritage Key – coming soon!

Tonight’s Lecture… the Oldest City in the Americas

5000 year-old ruins, Caral

I’m so excited! I’m going to a lecture held by the Archaeological Institute tonight in New York City, that promises to be very interesting. It’s about the city of Caral in Peru, which many experts now believe is the oldest city in the Americas, dating back as far as 2,600 BC. It will include information about nearby and equally ancient Cardal.

Tomorrow, I’m interviewing the presenter, Richard Burger, and will report back to HK with plenty of details about this mysterious ancient city. In the meantime, if there’s anything in particular you’d like me to ask him, let me know in the comments box below.

Ceramics only started being produced in the Americas in 1800 to 1600 BC, making the lack of them at Caral a controversial indication that the civilization there is older, and blowing the so-called “maritime theory” that civilization in that area started on the coast and didn’t move inland til much later right out of the water. There are plenty of traces of drugs and aphrodisiacs at the site, but no evidence of weapons or warfare, suggesting that Caral was a pretty civilized place to live compared to some other ancient locations.

See below for details:

From Caral to Cardal: Adventures in Early Peruvian Civilization

by Richard Burger, world-renowned expert on Peruvian archaeology, Professor of Anthropology, Yale University, and Director of Excavations at Cardal.

Thursday, 24 September 2009
6:30 9:30 PM | The Penn Club
30 West 44th Street at Fifth Avenue
New York, NY

The lecture will be followed by a special presentation of photographs from Christopher Kleihege, co-author of Caral: The First Civilization in the Americas, and by a reception featuring Peruvian specialties.