Print

Print


This is from the entry on horse-shoes that is in the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica:

"
Though the ancients were sufficiently impressed by the damage done to horses' hoofs to devise certain forms of covering for them (in the shape of socks or sandals), the practice of nailing iron plates or rim-shoes to the hoof does not appear to have been introduced earlier than the 2nd century B.C., and was not commonly known till the close of the 5th century A.D., or in regular use till the middle ages. The evidence for the earlier date depends on the doubtful interpretations of designs on coins, &c."



On Tuesday, November 12, 2013 10:53 AM, "[log in to unmask]" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Salima -- The received or traditional opinion is that the horseshoe
doesn't come along until Attila the Hun, i.e. early Medieval. However,
there is a shoe from good Roman context from a site near Newcastle, and I
also know of some others with good Roman context (which are unpublished as
yet). I think, given that the Romans were positively geniuses in the
working of iron, and also that I've seen some Roman nails that have the
peculiar one-sided form required for nailing the horseshoe on without
quicking the horse, that the Romans most certainly did use nailed
horseshoes as well as hipposandals.

This would also be true of mules; mules are in fact more likely to have
been shod than horses, and one of the shoes of which I am speaking above
was clearly for a mule and not a horse (the shape of the hoof differs).
Donkeys, however, I think are the least likely of the three equine
domesticates to have been shod -- anywhere, or at any time. If you have
small, U-shaped (rather than C-shaped) shoes they are probably for small
mules rather than donkeys. -- Dr. Deb


> Does anyone know when the horseshoe was invented? Or was it invented for
> donkeys? Please excuse my ignorance.
>
> Salima Ikram
> Egyptology Unit Head
> Professor of Egyptology
> American University in Cairo
> P. O. Box 74, Road 90, Tagammu 5
> New Cairo 11825, EGYPT
> [log in to unmask]
> Fax: +20-2-2797-4903
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>