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  1. #1
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    More on Celtic Toes

    "Discover, June, 1996
    The Germanic tribes of Angles and Saxons who invaded Britain in the fifth and
    sixth centuries A.D. left a significant legacy. Their language evolved into
    modern English, largely replacing indigenous Celtic tongues. Some of their laws
    formed the basis of English common law. And their feet, it the basis of modern
    Englishmen.

    Or so says Phyllis Jackson, a retired Gloucestershire podiatrist. Jackson got
    her first inkling of a distinctively Saxon foot during World War II, when
    Hereford, the small city in western England where she then lived, was flooded
    with refugees from more significant cities (which were being bombed by
    latter-day Germans). Some of these evacuees became Jackson's patients, and some
    of them turned out to be of Celtic descent - Scottish, Irish, Welsh, and
    Cornish. "Poor things were coming to me with awful bunions," recalls Jackson. "I
    realized that the foot shape I was dealing with was quite different from the
    English one I was accustomed to."

    Traditional English feet, Jackson says, tend to be broad and somewhat pointed -
    the toes form a steep angle from the first to the fifth. The Celtic evacuees, in
    contrast, had toe tips that were almost level with one another, and their feet
    tended to be longer and slimmer - except for a bulge at the base of the big toe,
    where bunions form. The English shoe being modeled on the English foot, many of
    Jackson's new patients "couldn't cram their feet into that shape of shoe." Hence
    they developed the bunions.

    After retiring from podiatry, Jackson took up amateur archeology but kept her
    focus on feet. Examining the skeletal remains of a few dozen Saxons and Celts
    from a sixth-century cemetery in Lechlade, Gloucestershire, she found she could
    readily tell them apart. It wasn't just that the Saxons were the ones buried
    with bronze brooches and amber necklaces - they also had feet shaped like modem
    English feet. Jackson also found a distinctive feature in the cuboid bone, just
    beneath the fourth and fifth toes: it was slightly scrunched on one side in
    Saxon feet, but more square in Celts.

    Aside from stimulating people of British descent to take a closer look at their
    extremities, Jackson's research - which has not been subjected to formal peer
    review - may help British archeologists. They have traditionally relied on
    burial artifacts to distinguish Celtic from Saxon skeletons, thus glossing over
    the likelihood that some Celts adopted Saxon ways. "What she is offering is a
    possibility of being able to sort out the immigrant from the indigenous
    population," says archeologist Barry Cunliffe of Oxford. "She needs a bigger
    sample, but she's spotted differences that are very real and very well worth
    following up."

    See http://findarticles.com/p/articles/m...17/ai_18289437

  2. #2
    Join Date
    27th May 07
    Location
    Leona Valley, California
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    Quote Originally Posted by gilmore View Post
    ... The Celtic evacuees, in contrast, had toe tips that were almost level with one another, and their feet tended to be longer and slimmer - except for a bulge at the base of the big toe, where bunions form. The English shoe being modeled on the English foot, many of Jackson's new patients "couldn't cram their feet into that shape of shoe." Hence they developed the bunions.
    Hmmm... That pretty much describes the shape of my feet, and the problem I have finding shoes.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    2nd July 06
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    That's really fascinating! That's so cool that it goes beyond red hair and blue eyes...

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