Store Front Account Basket Contents   Checkout
Homepage | About Us | Shipping | Reference | Mailing List | Help |
Search Products:
Sign In

Feng Shui

   Bells and Gongs
   Carved Spheres
   Gods & Goddesses
   Incense
   Incense Burners

Gifts & Decor

   Antique Lotus Shoes
   Batik Tapestry
   Bone Carvings
   Books & Catalogs
   Boxes & Containers
   Brass & Bronze
   Calligraphy
   Chinese Fans
   Cinnabar
   Cloisonne
   Copper Mini Teapots
   Cricket Cages
   Curios & Stands
   Ethnic Purses
   Figurines
   Framed Artwork
   Gold Leaf Lacquer
   Jingdezhen Porcelain
   Korean Celadon
   Reverse Painting
   Scarves & Shawls
   Scroll Paintings
   Sculptures
   Silk Embroidery
   Tribal Masks
   Unusual Finds
   Woodblock Prints

Jewelry

   Bracelets
   Earrings
   Jewelry Boxes
   Necklaces
   Pendants

Netsuke & Inro

   Bone & Wood Inro
   Boxwood
   Hardwood
   Mammoth Ivory
   Netsuke Jewelry
   Ojime Beads
   Tagua Nut
   Teakwood

Shop By Creature

   Dragon Collection
   Elephant Collection
   Foo Dog Collection
   Frog Collection
   Panda Collection
   Turtle Collection

Snuff Bottles

   Antique & Unique
   Auction Catalogs
   Bone & Horn
   Carved Stone
   Carved Wood
   Colored Glass
   Enamel / Brass
   Guyuexuan
   Inside Painted
   Metal
   Peking Glass
   Porcelain

Tableware

   Bento Boxes
   Chopsticks
   Japanese Sake Sets
   Japanese Sushi Sets
   Place Settings
   Plates & Bowls

Tea Shop

   Asian Tea
   Tea Cups
   Tea Sets
   Tetsubin Teapots
   Yixing Teapots

The Clearance Items

   Other Sale Items
   Sale Netsuke
   Sale Snuff Bottles

 

Chinese Foot Binding

We have all heard of the practice of foot binding prevalent in ancient China but not many of us are probably aware of how severe and painful this practice was. Women with small feet were considered the ultimate in sexual appeal and eligibility for a good marriage depended solely on this criteria in those days. Chinese families, depending on how affluent they were, bound the feet of their girl children between the ages of three to seven years. Those who were less well-off stalled this for as long as they could so that their daughter could be useful longer around the house and the fields. Once her feet were bound, she would not be able to move out at all. Presumably, this was also one of the reasons that foot binding became so popular, it insured that the woman would remain mainly confined to the home and depend solely on her husband also ensuring that this way she would remain chaste.

What did foot binding actually involve?

To give an extremely graphic account, the feet had to first be washed and massaged, after which, all except the first toe were broken and tied tightly under the foot. Then the arches were broken and the feet was bound tightly in extreme concavity with a long cloth bandage. Every day the bandage had to be removed, the feet were washed and massaged, toe nails were cut so that they would not cut into the instep and cause infections and then the bandage had to be bound back tightly again. In order to avoid severe infections like gangrene from setting in due to complete lack of blood supply and also to ease the pain, the feet were given hot and cold baths and regular attention. Gradually, extra flesh would rot and fall off due to lack of circulation and blood supply and the feet became narrower and shorter. The feet were put into smaller and smaller shoes and the bandages were bound tighter every day till they achieved the perfect size of three to four inches to fit into Lotus shoes.

The process was not only excruciatingly painful for the little girl when the feet were actually broken and bound but it was also very tedious for the family to care for her during the next two or three years. Not only that, during this period, the girl would be quite useless since even trying to put weight on her feet would mean excruciating pain. At the end of this period, the girl would have a badly contorted pair of feet which were considered the epitome of femininity and the only criterion for getting a good husband. The higher the social status of the family, the more important was this criterion.

The practice of foot binding started in the tenth century and lasted for approximately one thousand years until the Manchu Dynasty was toppled in 1911 and the New Republic banned foot binding. During this period, approximately one billion women had their feet bound.

The obvious question that arises is , how did this practice begin? There seems to be no conclusive evidence to it but there are various legends associated with foot binding. Some say that there was a Chinese princes called Yao Niang who walked so gracefully that it seemed as if she “skimmed over the top of golden lilies.” And since small feet are associated with daintiness, the Chinese became so excessively obsessed with the concept that they started this self-inflicted torture.

Another legend says that Yao Niang was ordered to bind her feet so that her feet would look like new moons. Yet another one says that women bound their feet out of sympathy for an Empress who had clubbed feet.

Women with bound feet could barely totter, as they had to walk with all their weight on their heels. Apart from having severely mangled feet, foot binding is said to cause many other disabilities. According to study by The University of California San Francisco which looked at the “prevalence and consequences” of foot binding, it was found that foot binding had a direct correlation to osteoporosis and other bone defects. The target for the study were Chinese women in the age group if seventy to hundred years at the time of the study who had their feet bound compared to those who never had their feet bound.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.