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Hanfu footwear
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also includes accessories, such as footwear. There were many etiquette which rule people's daily lives, and this included the use and etiquette of shoes and socks wearing.


Shoes
Collectively, shoes are typically called (履) since the .
(2025). 9781592650194, Long River Press.
In the , shoes were referred as ju (屦) . The word xie (鞋) eventually replaced the word to become a general name for shoes.

Since the ancient times, Chinese shoes came in various kinds; there were leather shoes (made of tanbark and pelt), cloth shoes (made of silk, hemp, damask, brocade, and crepe), and straw shoes (made of leaves and stems of cattail, corn leaves, and kudzu), ji (屐; wooden clogs). Han Chinese typically wore (regular shoes) , xi (shoes with thick soles), and ji (wooden ).

(2025). 9780231528184, Columbia University Press. .
(2025). 9780300074048, Yale University Press.
Different shoes were worn based on their appropriateness for specific occasions; shoes also denoted the social ranks of its wearers. Lü (履) were worn for formal occasions whereas ji (屐) was used for informal occasions.
+Types of Footwear ! colspan="2"Name !Definition !Description !Period ! colspan="3"Images
Ju (屦)ShoesSome shoes worn in Qin were square-headed; they were generally worn by .Qin dynasty
Lü (履) or Xie (鞋)Xieqiao (鞋翘) or Yuntouxie(云头鞋)Curled up ShoeSome ancient Chinese shoes had curled up-shoes, i.e. shoes with rising toe caps, and could come in different shapes, such as and phoenixes. Han – Unknown
Cailu (草履) or caixie (草鞋)Straw shoes, or straw sandals.
(2025). 9781138069428
Straw shoes were worn by almost all people in ancient China regardless of social ranks; nomadic tribes were the exception. Different types of leaves and leaves would be woven together to create these types of shoes.Ancient-modern
Lianlü (蓮履)Lotus shoes were worn by women who had . Exact date of origin is unknown. Based on folk stories, it may have appeared in the Five dynasties period or in the .Unknown – Modern
Hutou xie (虎头鞋)Also known as "tiger shoes". These shoes were worn by Han Chinese Chinese children to scare off bad spirits.
(2025). 9780804836630, Tuttle Pub.
(2025). 9787508506111, China International Press.
They are usually worn along with the tiger head hat. They vary in styles depending on regional culture.
Unknown – present day
Xiuhua xie (繡花鞋)Embroidered shoesAlso known as Chinese shoes, Chinese-style embroidered shoes, and Chinese slippers, are a well-known sub-type of traditional Chinese cloth shoes (中国布鞋);There are many shoe styles. The are characterized by its use of elaborate and colourful Chinese embroideries to create pattern on the shoes.The traditional handicraft of making xiuhuaxie is fully indigenous to China.Spring and Autumn period – present day
Ji (屐)Wooden Clogs were shoes with two bars running perpendicular under the sole. In , clogs were used on women's wedding day; they were decorated with colourful designs and ribbons.
In the Jin dynasty, a new type of clogs were made. The sole, upper and bars were made with a single, whole piece of wood.
A clog with removable bars, called "Lord Xie Shoe"; it was called after the Southern dynasties period poet whose creation of the shoe is attributed to.
Xueji (靴屐)Boot-like clogsThe clogs which were worn in Southern China gradually became more boot-like after the Tang dynasty.
Xue (靴)Leather bootsLeather boots were introduced by King Wuling of Zhao. They were generally worn by generals and calvarymen in . The Han Chinese also made women's boots. In the Northerners wore leather boots when horseback riding in the Northern and Southern dynasties.Zhou-Present day

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