image for article on wooden clogs Europe

Oldest wooden clogs in Europe are unearthed in the Netherlands

Around 1230 C.E., someone in what is now Amsterdam set down a pair of wooden shoes — and walked away from them forever. Centuries later, those shoes were pulled from the earth, and they looked almost exactly like the clogs still worn across the Netherlands today. That continuity is not coincidence. It is a record of a design so practical it barely needed to change.

What the evidence shows

  • Wooden clogs Europe: The oldest wooden footwear recovered in Europe was found in Amsterdam and Rotterdam in the Netherlands, dating to approximately 1230 C.E. and 1280 C.E. respectively.
  • Clog construction: These early Dutch examples were whole-foot carved wooden shoes, shaped to follow the contours of the foot — nearly identical in form to clogs still produced and worn in the region today.
  • Global clog history: Wooden footwear is far older than the Dutch examples: ancient Chinese records mention wooden (屐) at least as far back as the Han dynasty, and ancient Greeks and Romans wore wooden-soled sandals and overshoes long before 1230 C.E.

Why wood made sense

Medieval Europe was cold, wet, and muddy. For agricultural workers, laborers, and ordinary townspeople, leather was expensive and absorbed moisture. Wood was abundant, workable with basic tools, and could be shaped into a form that kept feet above the damp ground.

The clog solved this problem elegantly. The thick wooden sole insulated the foot from cold earth and shed water. A slight upward curve at the toe — called the cast — allowed the foot to roll forward naturally with each step, making the rigid shoe far more walkable than it might appear.

Each pair was carved by hand, which meant styles varied by region, by maker, and by available timber. Willow, poplar, and alder were common choices in the Low Countries — all fast-growing, lightweight woods that could be shaped with a hollowing knife and finished to a smooth interior. The fit mattered enormously: a poorly carved clog caused blisters; a well-made one could last years.

Not a Dutch invention — but a Dutch landmark

It would be wrong to call the Netherlands the birthplace of wooden footwear. Across Asia, wooden shoes had been in use for millennia. In Japan, geta — wooden platform sandals elevated on two teeth — appear in records stretching back centuries before the Amsterdam find. In Korea, namaksin served a similar function in wet conditions. Ancient Chinese women wore carved wooden at weddings during the Han dynasty, decorated with colored ribbons.

What the Amsterdam and Rotterdam finds represent is something more specific: the oldest physical evidence of wooden footwear to survive in Europe. They tell us that by 1230 C.E., the residents of what would become the Netherlands had independently — or through some chain of transmitted knowledge — arrived at a nearly identical solution to the one craftspeople across Asia had been refining for generations.

That parallel convergence is one of the quiet wonders of material history. When humans face the same problem — wet feet, cold ground, expensive leather — they often arrive at the same answer.

From farm to fashion

For centuries, clogs carried an association with poverty and manual labor. They were the shoes of farmers, miners, and factory workers — functional, unadorned, cheap to produce. That association was not entirely unfair: clogs were worn precisely because they were affordable and durable in ways that leather could not match in harsh conditions.

But the story did not stop there. In the 1970s and 1980s, Swedish clogs became a fashion item across Western countries, worn by both men and women. In 2007, Dutch designers Viktor & Rolf sent high-heeled wooden clogs down the runway. In 2010, Chanel and Louis Vuitton featured wooden-soled footwear in their spring collections. The clog had traveled from the mud of a medieval Dutch town to the catwalks of Paris.

Today, traditional clog-making is recognized as an intangible cultural heritage in several European countries. Machine production largely replaced hand-carving after the early 20th century, but a small number of craftspeople still hollow clogs by hand using techniques that would be familiar to the person who made the Amsterdam pair in 1230 C.E.

Lasting impact

Clogs outlasted the medieval world and shaped industries that followed. In the textile mills of England and the factories of continental Europe, wooden-soled footwear protected workers’ feet from machinery, falling objects, and chemical spills — a function that steel-toed boots would eventually inherit.

Clog dancing, practiced across the British Isles, France, and the Netherlands, became one of the direct ancestors of tap dancing. The rhythmic beat of a wooden sole against a stone floor turned footwear into percussion — a cultural inheritance that traveled with emigrant communities across the Atlantic and eventually into American music.

In agriculture and industry, clogs remained in use well into the 20th century in parts of the Netherlands, Belgium, France, and Scandinavia. Their design — protective, insulating, durable — proved so effective that some modern safety footwear incorporates the same principles, just in composite materials instead of willow or poplar.

Blindspots and limits

The archaeological record has gaps. Wood decays, and the Amsterdam and Rotterdam finds survived largely because of the waterlogged, anaerobic conditions of Dutch soil — conditions that accidentally served as a preservation vault. There may well be older European examples that simply did not survive. The claim that these are the “oldest in Europe” is an artifact of what has been found, not necessarily of what once existed.

The history of clog-making also largely omits the workers who made them — traveling clog-makers, rural craftspeople, and later factory hands whose labor produced millions of pairs without leaving names in the record. The design endures; the people behind it mostly do not.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Clog

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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