Page:Horse shoes and horse shoeing.djvu/337

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M. DEFAYS' SPECIMEN.
329

tended for such a purpose; and figure 122 is not much better adapted for a sandal.

fig. 123

Professor Defays gives a drawing of another of this division, with an eye and ring posteriorly, two side clips without hooks, and the sole pierced by two round holes (fig 123).

Figures of the second type are as numerous, if not more so, than those of the first; and they have also been found with them, and with nailed shoes, in various excavations on Roman and

Frankish sites. The Museum of

fig.124