3 Reasons WHY Samurai Wore Slipper-like Shoes | The History of Waraji, Zori, and Geta

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  • Опубліковано 29 тра 2024
  • “Isn’t it uncomfortable to walk in slippers when you wear a kimono? No, it’s actually the other way around“
    I’ve made quite a lot of videos talking about the fashion of samurai; About the two katana swords that they always carried, their chonmage hairstyle, and the skirt-like clothes called hakama.
    However, there is one more thing that I haven't talked about yet… it is about their “shoes!” Why did samurai always wear slippers?
    So today, I will explain about the history of traditional shoes in Japan, and WHY they wore slipper-like shoes made from straw and wood. By watching this video, you will be able to deepen your understanding towards the culture of daily life of Japanese people, and enjoy your experience of wearing kimono more when you visit Japan.
    [Time codes]
    0:00 Let's START!
    1:23 The history of shoes in Japan
    8:51 Why Japanese wore these shoes
    12:09 Today's conclusion
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,4 тис.

  • @Green4CloveR
    @Green4CloveR 2 роки тому +2336

    One more observation I would like to add is that it RAINS A LOT in Japan. This influenced traditional architecture so that the homes sits sightly higher to the grown. This prevented water and mud to enter the living spaces. Your shoes and sandals would often be wet and muddy as well so you would have to leave your footwear at the entrance. Geta and other wooden sandals are also elevated to keep your feet dry and above the water level as you walk over wet streets and muddy roads.

    • @talanbryant9410
      @talanbryant9410 2 роки тому +75

      Why didn't we do that in UK?

    • @Green4CloveR
      @Green4CloveR 2 роки тому +38

      @@talanbryant9410 lack of trees?

    • @LaurenceWilliamson
      @LaurenceWilliamson 2 роки тому +84

      @@Green4CloveR Used to be mostly forest in UK. Maybe its more like the culture didn't believe disease came from being dirty like the did in Japan??

    • @Surestart
      @Surestart 2 роки тому +77

      @@talanbryant9410 I assume because it's difficult to make a stone house in this manner, and stone being preferable to wood for building in the British Isles because of the abundance of stones left behind when glaciers receded after the last major ice age. Larger stones needed to be removed from fields before they could be effectively plowed, usually resulting in them being stacked as walls and fences around the perimeter of the fields, but there would have been enough to also build the walls of structures from them as well. Japan is much further south than Britain and was not totally covered by ice sheets the way that the British Isles were, meaning stones of an appropriate size for building would have needed to be quarried rather than just picked up off the ground.

    • @FF18Cloud
      @FF18Cloud 2 роки тому +7

      @@talanbryant9410 because *industrial revolution*
      ... And what other people said...

  • @Call-me-Al
    @Call-me-Al 2 роки тому +1148

    As a Scandinavian, wearing outdoor shoes inside seems very gross...

    • @gabrielmajin5265
      @gabrielmajin5265 2 роки тому +239

      most ppl in the world take their shoes off when they go inside....the ideea of bringing whatever its outside IN the house is insanity...i walk barefoot in my house...hard wood floors and thick rugs...the shoes inside the house and cheap carpet is an american thing

    • @hugodogobob
      @hugodogobob 2 роки тому +100

      Yeah, I'm English and only the weird people wear shoes indoors

    • @just1it1moko
      @just1it1moko 2 роки тому +17

      even in the netherlands its about 50/50 if people take their shoes off indoors.

    • @jonangorman6341
      @jonangorman6341 2 роки тому +33

      @@gabrielmajin5265 american wear outdoor shoes inside the house?

    • @atlas4733
      @atlas4733 2 роки тому +48

      As a Canadian I also find it revolting.

  • @dragoncatoverload
    @dragoncatoverload 2 роки тому +17

    “Why do Japanese take off their shoes in the house”
    I think the better question is, why is anyone wearing shoes in the house in the first place?

  • @azaelleal9282
    @azaelleal9282 2 роки тому +619

    I was surprised that the first type of sandals it's called "Waraji" because it sounds almost identical to the ones made with leather straps that in Mexico we call "Huarache". It is considered a garment of the indigenous peoples and is part of some of their typical outfits.
    Saludos, amigo.

    • @kassyyar97
      @kassyyar97 2 роки тому +36

      Pensé lo mismo! Que coincidencia

    • @acephas3
      @acephas3 2 роки тому +7

      Olmecs

    • @gabrielaarganaraz9113
      @gabrielaarganaraz9113 2 роки тому +3

      En el norte de Argentina guaracha o.o

    • @aaronsilva9611
      @aaronsilva9611 2 роки тому +33

      same pronunciation... not almost identical, SAME!... for sure is a language integrarion... when and how?... homework for linguists

    • @JorgeAguilar-ch9oe
      @JorgeAguilar-ch9oe 2 роки тому +11

      That is an excellent observation Azael!!

  • @albinoasesino
    @albinoasesino 2 роки тому +1076

    After watching this video, I think the real question shogo, is:
    "How do the early Japanese identify which pair of shoes is theirs at the entrance after a social gathering?"

    • @Amy_the_Lizard
      @Amy_the_Lizard 2 роки тому +126

      Well, I suppose if you know your own memory sucks to much to remember exactly where you put yours, you could awkwardly hover near the entrance until everyone else claimed theirs so you could figure it out via process of elemination. Or if that's not an option, you could compare the size of your foot to each pair and hope no one else has the same foot size, but that would probably annoy other people, since it'd take a while and involve you messing with their shoes. Or you could try marking the shoe in some way to make identification easier, which would probably be simplest

    • @Textile_Courtesan
      @Textile_Courtesan 2 роки тому +134

      If you're visiting a large estate it is the responsibility of the servants to track everyone's shoes. Even when I visit my Sensei's home she has a system of how guest leave shoes so everyone can access their shoes and remember where they have left them.

    • @Thoroughly_Wet
      @Thoroughly_Wet 2 роки тому +27

      Smell

    • @unable1234
      @unable1234 2 роки тому +17

      Smell

    • @jajordan2106
      @jajordan2106 2 роки тому +65

      taste

  • @mnk9073
    @mnk9073 2 роки тому +209

    I saw what an asian mom can do with a flip-flop, I'd say the slippers were the most dangerous item a samurai carried...

    • @srajanverma9064
      @srajanverma9064 2 роки тому +5

      Thats so true!!🤣

    • @joaofranco9751
      @joaofranco9751 2 роки тому +21

      I think the Flying Flip-Flop style is well known worldwide in the Mom's Guild.

    • @NATA5II
      @NATA5II 2 роки тому +16

      Known by many names, la chancla is a formidable weapon and has been used by mothers since the dawn of time.

    • @WalterLoggetti
      @WalterLoggetti 2 роки тому +12

      The "Ciabatta" fly often from the hand of the italian mothers...

    • @ilijabosnjak76
      @ilijabosnjak76 2 роки тому +7

      😂 😂 😂 Back home in Bosnia 🇧🇦 we have Opanak it’s very deadly when you get your mom mad 😡…
      RUN 🏃‍♂️ 😂

  • @KahiauT
    @KahiauT 2 роки тому +133

    My mother learned to make zori from rice straw as a child in Japan. Now she occasionally makes them from tshirt strips for indoors.

  • @sevenproxies4255
    @sevenproxies4255 2 роки тому +144

    In my country, we don't wear shoes indoors either.
    The only exceptions would be in the workplace. You're not normally expected to remove your shoes just because you enter your office.
    The other exception might be if you're having a garden party where guests might require to go between the outdoors and indoors frequently.
    But the host of such a party usually expects to have to clean the floors of the house after having so many guests over anyway.

    • @StargazerMay
      @StargazerMay 2 роки тому +7

      I often wish it would be common practice to remove shoes in the office! :D At least at school (in Russia), we were asked to have different "indoors" shoes to wear inside the building, especially in the winter so that the mud and water is not all over the corridors. At the office (my experience is from Russia and Finland), many would also change their outdoors shoes into something clean and comfortable to wear the whole day. Depending on your office space and culture, it may be okay to remove shoes completely. Obviously, neither in Russia nor in Finland you would ever wear your shoes inside your own or someone else's home, that's quite unthinkable to me. In Russia though, many would wear slippers indoors and have spare ones for guests (potentially unhygienic, I've no idea why this would ever be preferable to walking barefoot).

    • @Forseti2
      @Forseti2 2 роки тому +3

      @@StargazerMay exactly it's perfectly normal to leave or change your shoes at the entrance here in Czechia and Slovakia. Basically the same reason - to prevent spreading dirt and mud all over the place and it's more comfortable, at least during cold days in winter.

  • @tb124.gaming
    @tb124.gaming 2 роки тому +152

    Btw I don't know why some people think that it's weird that you have to remove your shoes in Japan, in eastern Europe it's very common to remove your shoes when you enter someone's home... (I'm pretty sure, that other places too)

    • @humbugryerson8845
      @humbugryerson8845 2 роки тому +20

      Yeah its the norm in Canada to take off your shoes and walk barefoot in a house or hand indoor shoes for guests

    • @Zero-tk1hb
      @Zero-tk1hb 2 роки тому +10

      @@humbugryerson8845 Same here on Brazil. Walking barefoot on home or using other pair of sandals that are clean and already inside the house is basicaly the norm. But i'm from the Amazon, quite rainy weather like japan and we have a lot of imigrants from japan too. Sepecialy on Parintins.

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 2 роки тому +1

      Too, i mean depnd who , but unless you hav a stone floor, its just more comfy to take them off. An i ont think stone floors are that common.
      Apearently that was in brittain hih would explain a lot.

    • @VianiPZN-
      @VianiPZN- 2 роки тому +3

      It's the same thing in germany

    • @ReyOfLight
      @ReyOfLight 2 роки тому +3

      Same in Sweden.

  • @evelyne7071
    @evelyne7071 2 роки тому +249

    Years ago I bought some “getas” in a Japanese store here in the US. They were so comfortable to wear. I was very sad when the wood finally wore down after several years. It was so interesting to walk-in them because I felt as if I was in a rocking chair. It’s hard to explain, but I can’t wait to find some more for myself.

    • @wissamalhashemi5548
      @wissamalhashemi5548 2 роки тому +16

      lol interesting word choice there. "Interesting to walk in them"... Did you think "Oh, this is interesting!" for each and every step you took in them? lmao

    • @evelyne7071
      @evelyne7071 2 роки тому +66

      Yes, every time I wore my getas, it was a walking experience. It was so much fun and so different than I was used to in my regular western shoe, that it was like “being-in-the-moment “ with every step. Very Zen.

    • @wissamalhashemi5548
      @wissamalhashemi5548 2 роки тому +11

      @@evelyne7071 Very fun to hear, glad for you

    • @Atlessa
      @Atlessa 2 роки тому +4

      What's stopping you from buying another pair?

    • @loverboy6149
      @loverboy6149 2 роки тому +10

      @@Atlessa they could be hard to find if youre not from japan or idk maybe theyre over priced in america, or havent found one thats perfect for them?

  • @Nobody_Cares913
    @Nobody_Cares913 2 роки тому +276

    Man your style of making videos, especially the structure, is just impecable.

    • @philcollinslover56705
      @philcollinslover56705 2 роки тому +16

      I agree! I have ADHD and the format really helps with remembering information and staying engaged. Thank you Shogo.

    • @abooogeek
      @abooogeek 2 роки тому +7

      Shogo-san makes his videos in a very pedagogic fashion, which make them great as learning materials. He always give a brief introductions, then lay the learning objectives before going into depth and putting them into context with the existing literature/consensus, then will conclude by repeating the main talking points. It is very instructive and well-designed. Arrigato Gozaimasu Shogo-san :).

  • @josequintero2627
    @josequintero2627 2 роки тому +266

    What i found super interesting was how the Japanese word for traditional slippers sounds very similar to the slipper like shoes that the Aztecs and Mayas used in the Americas, the word for this traditional Aztec/Maya slipper is "huarache" and the Japanese is "waraji", very interested to know the roots of these words and if they're somehow "related" in a sense.

    • @keithklassen5320
      @keithklassen5320 2 роки тому +25

      Probably just chance, languages and technology were both very much changed by the journey over the Bering land bridge and down thru the Americas.

    • @zzBaBzz
      @zzBaBzz 2 роки тому +7

      It all stems from one language ;)

    • @sandralison7584
      @sandralison7584 2 роки тому +7

      Its doesn't sound similar at all. Completely different words

    • @owlobsidian6965
      @owlobsidian6965 2 роки тому +35

      I noticed the same thing. Maybe it is a phonetic interpretation of the sound sandals make?
      And to anyone who thinks the word so not sound alike, let me clarify that "huarache" is pronounced like "warache".

    • @anilover10
      @anilover10 2 роки тому +7

      This is literally the first thing that came to my mind when I heard it

  • @buenoloco4455
    @buenoloco4455 2 роки тому +185

    In Finland you take your shoes of always when you enter in a house. You'll get beating/scolding and will be removed otherwise. Even walking barefoot inside house is more appropriate, but shoes are just common sense to leave near the outdoor

    • @sharonbelcher9635
      @sharonbelcher9635 2 роки тому +2

      Yes I have always made my kids remove their shoes when we visit or at home as he said look what your shoes bring in So many germs.

    • @buenoloco4455
      @buenoloco4455 2 роки тому +4

      @@sharonbelcher9635 Yes, But germs aside. No shoes even if you could eat on them

    • @tb124.gaming
      @tb124.gaming 2 роки тому +11

      Same in Hungary, my mom would beat me if entered our house with shoes

    • @BillyJoe1305
      @BillyJoe1305 2 роки тому

      Yeah, it's not so much houses that's weird as it is public spaces.

    • @Sundji
      @Sundji 2 роки тому +1

      @@buenoloco4455 Okay but why? At that point, it doesn't make sense to me. To me, the only reason I'd leave my shoes behind is that they're presumed to be dirty.

  • @simeleesteleo
    @simeleesteleo 2 роки тому +73

    This is fascinating!! In Mexico we have the word "Huarache"(that souds very similar to Waraji) and are also sandals!!

  • @j0hndobile802
    @j0hndobile802 2 роки тому +70

    Japan: Waraji = Sandal
    Mexican Spanish: Huarache = Sandal/Flip Flop o' Death

    • @joesmith3829
      @joesmith3829 2 роки тому +16

      Chancleta: Mexican shuriken

    • @Fitzn
      @Fitzn 2 роки тому +3

      Thought the same when I first heard him pronounce it

    • @deadpoet22
      @deadpoet22 2 роки тому +3

      My grandparents who have what people there call a more "indio" accent actually pronounce it "warachi". Sinaloa, northern region.

    • @tehualilianblancoarizpe5729
      @tehualilianblancoarizpe5729 2 роки тому +2

      I was about to comment this! Really interesting similarity of words.

    • @PaxImbrium
      @PaxImbrium 2 роки тому +7

      Yo I was shocked by this too. This is too close to be a coincidence, Huaraches look damn near identical to the traditional Waraji pictured. I'm thinking there's got to have been some form of early Japanese cultural exchange with the new world.

  • @momkatmax
    @momkatmax 2 роки тому +90

    I heard that you remove your shoes due to the tatami mats being delicate enough to be dented by harder footwear. It saves money and is polite.

    • @DnBastard
      @DnBastard 2 роки тому

      i;d hazard a guess that delicate tatami mats were around first and were able to exist because people didn't walk over them in hard footware rather than the other way round

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 2 роки тому +2

      It alo nice for the feet. Why would you wear the same outide and inside if inside its comfy softer.

    • @EmperorSigismund
      @EmperorSigismund 2 роки тому

      Just about any flooring can be damaged. I remember having to endure hearing my aunt chew out my cousin after her 21st because all her friends lefts marks in the timber floor with their stiletto heels.

  • @yuzurucorner
    @yuzurucorner 2 роки тому +40

    One type of geta I find interesting is the one-prong geta, usually seen on depictions of the yokai tengu. It is said that one-prong geta's are mainly used in the mountains for climbing, so that the geta creates a 90 degree angle, sort of like stairs.

    • @HepauDK
      @HepauDK 2 роки тому +2

      Ah, I've been wondering about those. Thanks for the explanation. :)

  • @burnedraventales6030
    @burnedraventales6030 2 роки тому +25

    I think this is the first time I have voluntarily watched a video about shoes. Really well made and informative, very enjoyable to watch.

  • @ivanabear8824
    @ivanabear8824 2 роки тому +17

    I remember in the 1970’s we wore rubber-soled Zoris a lot here in the US. They were popular for casual wear. My grandmother always called any flip-flops Zoris after having lived in Okinawa for several years.

  • @lacrartezorok4975
    @lacrartezorok4975 2 роки тому +34

    Here in Mexico we call flops Huaraches, from the purépecha kwarachi. It's an amazing coincidence.

  • @frauleintrude6347
    @frauleintrude6347 2 роки тому +23

    I spent my free time during childhood summers in wooden slippers (In German Holzlatschen) and clogs. Best for hot summer days before the beach sandal came into fashion. I still like them. Bought some Geta in Japan, a little different but also nice to wear.

  • @Titopaivag3
    @Titopaivag3 2 роки тому +69

    Fun fact, the "beach sandals" everyone wears are a staple of brazilian culture, specially in Rio de Janeiro, where we are known to wear then even when going out to malls or restaurants. I wonder if this sandal idea came from Japan with the immigration.

    • @oliverm3589
      @oliverm3589 2 роки тому +10

      They are also everywhere here in New Zealand. We call them Jandals, which is short for Japanese Sandals. We wear them everywhere in summer. It's not uncommon to have an everyday pair and a nicer pair that can be worn to a bar, pub or restaurant.

    • @galadballcrusher8182
      @galadballcrusher8182 2 роки тому +1

      @@oliverm3589 funny enough we call the beach slippers in Greece by a certain word we use as noun which i think is related to them Japanese sandal ones type when it was first imported because said noun is based on a very Japanese word "sayonara" although as noun we even have a plural form "sayonares"....

    • @firstandlastaliv3
      @firstandlastaliv3 2 роки тому +2

      It's related to Japanese immigrants. They used to be called "japanese sandals" and then they rebrand the name.

    • @sibral
      @sibral 2 роки тому +4

      the brazilian sandals were inspired by the japanese Zori sandals and branded as "Havaianas" (hawaiians). As the slipper was not made of rice straw, but rubber, a texture based on grains of rice was included in the sole of the sandal.

    • @cymond
      @cymond 2 роки тому +4

      "Beach sandals" are frequently called "flip-flops" in my part of the USA. Some people like them and wear them everywhere, and line most things, they go in and out of fashion. My high school banned them because (supposedly) they were unsafe on the stairs.

  • @garydell2023
    @garydell2023 2 роки тому +89

    Shoes are not worn in the house in Germany. This was interesting Shogo-san.

    • @shiggon2804
      @shiggon2804 2 роки тому +6

      Some Germans actually do wear shoes at home. I have a couple of acquaintances who do wear them in the house.

    • @AGS363
      @AGS363 2 роки тому +1

      @@shiggon2804 That is usually part of the north/south divide. Northeners are far more likely to wear shoes indoors than Southeners.

    • @kogoromori30
      @kogoromori30 2 роки тому +2

      @@AGS363 Some in the South were shoes indoors, too. So I would say it's rather a cultural divide that most people are not aware of.

    • @ShSwStudios
      @ShSwStudios 2 роки тому +4

      @@kogoromori30 I believe it's a case of social backround in Germany. People raised in academic households tend to take of shoes indoors more often than those, who grew up in the working class. At least that's what I found to be true to people in the area of Hamburg, where I live.

    • @sydneyslaughter7163
      @sydneyslaughter7163 2 роки тому +1

      Ohhhhh, maybe that’s where my grandma got it from; she lived in Germany for several years. Checks out, I’ll ask her

  • @IsaVarg
    @IsaVarg 2 роки тому +10

    I can't imagine wearing my outdoor shoes inside. You track in dirt and grass and all sorts of things and spread it all over your floor and your furniture. I remember someone telling me they keep them on because their feet are dirty! You can easily clean your feet, but having to clean your floors every day because you get dirt all over it seems like much more of a chore.

  • @Mamoru0Hasukage
    @Mamoru0Hasukage 2 роки тому +22

    I own about 3 pairs of waraji and some nice geta. Surprisingly, I ended up liking the geta more than I thought. They are traditional styled geta with two bars and not the tengu style.

  • @AnonymousXIII
    @AnonymousXIII 2 роки тому +14

    It's worth pointing out that removing your shoes would also be a sign of respect for the owner of the house, or the person who cleans the floors. If you've never walked into a shop and found yourself walking over someone's just-mopped floor, you may not understand how awkward it is to realize you've just rendered all the work they did worthless.

  • @dashinarnie
    @dashinarnie 2 роки тому +14

    just unknowingly ordered setta to go with my kimono last week. thank you for the knowledge. I couldn't find much information on men's Japanese shoes after searching for long.

  • @veronikacsuri1629
    @veronikacsuri1629 2 роки тому +35

    Here in Hungary, and as far as I know most part of EU, we take off our shoes after entering a home in the hall to keep the homes clean. Of course there are exceptions when someone says keep them on, especially if the floor is cold and there are no guest slippers. But using slippers is the common way :)

    • @carmendelabellemotte7865
      @carmendelabellemotte7865 2 роки тому

      No it is not the norm in Europe...some do but most don't

    • @Idengard
      @Idengard 2 роки тому +4

      @@carmendelabellemotte7865 the only people I „know“ of leaving street shoes on in the house are Americans. And that I only „know“ from TV. Whom are you talking about?

    • @frofro7134
      @frofro7134 2 роки тому +2

      @@carmendelabellemotte7865 it is norm in europe. where are you from?

    • @carmendelabellemotte7865
      @carmendelabellemotte7865 2 роки тому +1

      @@Idengard I am from France and I also lived a quite significant time in Austria, Germany, UK and Ireland...taking off my shoes was never required...some ppl do it but they never ask their guests to do so...keep in mind that of course if it is muddy or snowing ppl will do it but eh we have outside carpets. The ones who take off their shoes only do it in the first floor if there are bedrooms and with carpet on the floor, but at the basement with floor tiles that's simply not the case .I am 44 and I met enough ppl so I guess my experience is valid.

    • @carmendelabellemotte7865
      @carmendelabellemotte7865 2 роки тому +1

      @@frofro7134 I am from France...it is let to the appreciation to our guests to take off or not their shoes...unless they make dirty your floor you don't mind.Whereas ppl in Asia would hate you , we don't if you keep your shoes on...never we ask our repair men or doctors or neighbours to take off their shoes...most ppl I have met said " oh it is OK you can keep your shoes " .The reason is simply , most houses don't have a special area at the entrance to store shoes and propose sleepers to your guests...then it is not very hygienic to wear sleepers from others and then it may be impolite to let your guests shoesless or bare feet..and if he has smelly feet, oh dear , please keep your feet in your shoes.🤣also we don't have a bad climate or bad roads so keep our shoes on will not make our place that dirty .

  • @kurtwisener6856
    @kurtwisener6856 2 роки тому +8

    Buddy, I could watch you talk about anything forever. Subbed so hard I chipped a nail.

  • @miriammanolov9135
    @miriammanolov9135 2 роки тому +6

    When I grew up in Iraq, we had house slippers we wore indoors only and more specifically during the autumn and winter times because we had Persian carpets covering most of our floors. In the spring and summer times, we remove these carpets and keep the tiles/marble floors exposed to keep the house cooler, and we can wear our indoor and outdoor shoes inside the house, but we hard to sweep and mop the floor daily !! If we visited homes that kept their carpets all year long, we remove our shoes by the door. That's at least what I noticed growing up there.

  • @user-rd3rf3ft8e
    @user-rd3rf3ft8e 2 роки тому +11

    I thought all three reasons would be "because leatherworking wasn't a thing" but I learned a lot instead. Thank you!

    • @davidlyon4950
      @davidlyon4950 2 роки тому +2

      I imagine that also had something to do with the form and material choice of footwear. Leather goods and leather workers were considered unclean in ancient Japan.

  • @g.m.1756
    @g.m.1756 2 роки тому +17

    Just as a curious fact, did you know the the first Havaianas' design was inspired by japanese footwear? They were also made by weaving straw, at least for a brief period of time, before being made out of rubber.

  • @petergarcia8225
    @petergarcia8225 2 роки тому +8

    Just the history of Japanese Sandals and Shoes shows how resourceful Japanese people are. Thru warm weather to subzero temperatures.

  • @adrianacosta8868
    @adrianacosta8868 2 роки тому +14

    I find it interesting that Mexican leather sandals are called “huaraches”
    Pronounced- Wara-chess

    • @keithklassen5320
      @keithklassen5320 2 роки тому

      It gets better: huarache were originally woven from yucca leaves.

  • @LetsaskShogo
    @LetsaskShogo  2 роки тому +43

    When I used to work at Kyoto Samurai Experience, I received quite a lot of people asking, “Shogo, why are you wearing slippers outside?” when I was wearing my 雪駄 setta.
    There were actually some people who really thought they were slippers, and tried to bring my shoes inside the building and wear them indoors…!
    In this video I will be explaining to you why samurai wore shoes that look like flip-flops on purpose, and why it’s actually more comfortable to wear these kinds of shoes when swinging swords.

    In this channel, you can take a closer look at Japanese traditional culture, tips upon traveling to Kyoto, and social problems in Japan.
    So learners and lovers of Japanese language and culture, be sure to subscribe to enjoy more content!
    Please check out the description box for more videos recommended for you!
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    ▼Sub channel “Shogo’s Podcast”▼
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    The perfect channel to learn about Japanese culture and history in your spare time, during your walk to school or work, and when you are cooking or doing house chores.
    Not only will I be covering the topics in this main channel, but also some topics that you will only be able to enjoy in the sub-channel, like answering questions I receive, and my opinions towards some of the comments.
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    Thank you again very much for watching!

    • @michaeltheundeadmariachi4494
      @michaeltheundeadmariachi4494 2 роки тому

      Which of the first 4 japanese shoes do you recommend?

    • @johnnycolt3071
      @johnnycolt3071 Рік тому

      UA-cam recommended a music album called: Samurai Shoes - Samuel Blues . Haha, great music tho

  • @andrewepp6763
    @andrewepp6763 9 днів тому

    I am so grateful that there are shows like yours to help me learn more about the world. So amazing! Thank you!

  • @hkoizumi3134
    @hkoizumi3134 2 роки тому +7

    speaking of japanese religion keeping impurity outside, I remember as a child in japan, we used to do this special thing in holiday where we yell "fukua uchi, oniwa soto" as we threw rice outside.

  • @ayush885
    @ayush885 2 роки тому +4

    The structuring of videos, the timestamps, and especially the conclusion is awesome.

  • @TrueHealth27
    @TrueHealth27 2 роки тому +1

    I love your REGAL Leo energy!!! So dignified and proud of your culture! Great work!!!

  • @silverbeam88
    @silverbeam88 2 роки тому +4

    Professor SHOGO strikes again!! Love these educated videos on Japanese culture!!❤️😆

  • @davesmontages2495
    @davesmontages2495 2 роки тому +48

    I don't understand the "please adjust speed". You talk in a perfect pace

    • @Rakerong
      @Rakerong 2 роки тому +7

      I consider it a 'respectable pace'. Shogo is teaching us things, and we can consume this knowledge without getting lost in fast talking, strange volume and pitches, and other such things more easily.

    • @Sundji
      @Sundji 2 роки тому +4

      It's a bit slow at regular speed. He's not really going into very detailed information so it can be understood at a slightly faster rate without losing any of it's effectiveness and saving people a bit of time.

    • @KingKamal47
      @KingKamal47 2 роки тому +4

      It's so you can customize the video to the speed you want it at. I love his videos at 1.5x, but some people like it at 1x or even 2x. It just depends on your personal preference.

    • @matreen427
      @matreen427 2 роки тому

      it’s at a relaxing pace.

    • @Rakerong
      @Rakerong 2 роки тому +2

      @@KingKamal47 I didn't realize that. It sounds perfect for me at 1.25x speed, though I don't have a problem with it at normal pace.

  • @jeffreyrobles7959
    @jeffreyrobles7959 2 роки тому +7

    It's funny to me how cultures seem to thrive from each other or at least were gifted with these ancient knowledge. When you mentioned Waraji... first thing that came to mind is the traditional "Guarache" from the Latin America area. Known for it durability due to the weaving of materials used

    • @cecilyerker
      @cecilyerker 2 роки тому +1

      The similarities of the two words actually freaks me out

  • @aishah1055
    @aishah1055 2 роки тому +81

    I'm sorry but when you said "its very irritating, isn't it?" I really couldn't relate, in my country we don't wear shoes inside the house too since long ago sksksks 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @aemeth5418
      @aemeth5418 2 роки тому +25

      I guess that's pretty common in most European countries. Even as a child, I was always surprised how in American films they often showed how "weird" the Japanese are, because they take off their shoes, and for me it was always normal.

    • @smoke4824
      @smoke4824 2 роки тому +6

      I'm American and shoes in the house is nasty I step on dog poop at least once a month...

    • @localmilfchaser6938
      @localmilfchaser6938 2 роки тому +7

      “sksksk”😐😐😐

    • @adalimh1556
      @adalimh1556 2 роки тому

      neither do we, I can relate to both though

    • @YES-et4qm
      @YES-et4qm 2 роки тому +11

      The real question is why DOESN’T Americans take off their shoes indoors?

  • @trkimura
    @trkimura 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you for another fun and informative video! I appreciate that you’re able to talk to us in layman’s terms. Best of luck reaching your goal for 2022!!!

  • @Sniper5875
    @Sniper5875 2 роки тому +5

    this was a nice detailed overview. i looked into oiran apparel myself a few months ago due to yugiri having such an accurate wardrobe during her time in zombieland saga.
    i enjoyed getting even more knowledge about footwear in japan. i think its also amazing that looking back, i watched an anime whoch inspired me to look up this information on oiran and geisha, as well as the time periods before westernization in japan

  • @DnBastard
    @DnBastard 2 роки тому +4

    it's interesting how the geta and dutch wooden clogs had similar practical origins. clogs are also supposed to be really good for walking in mud and fields which was why they were supposedly invented, as a kind of farmer's boot for the swampy marshy land of the polders. many farmers in the country still use them to this day

  • @TrikeRoadPoet
    @TrikeRoadPoet 12 днів тому

    I so enjoyed this history lesson, so very informative and clear. Thank you for sharing!

  • @Mamurai
    @Mamurai 2 роки тому +5

    In Denmark and any Nordic country you always take your shoes off before entering a home. The concept where people don't is really strange to me.

  • @petergarcia8225
    @petergarcia8225 2 роки тому +5

    You are a great teacher and historian. Great job!

  • @utaeyokujou6290
    @utaeyokujou6290 2 роки тому +5

    flip flops are my favorite kind of shoe, along with sneakers. glad to know their roots

  • @myushankaiswarm
    @myushankaiswarm 2 роки тому +2

    I’m Filipino and I’ve always wondered why we removed footwear before entering a house. This video made me curious so I searched it up for my culture, and it showed that it was a practice that was passed to us from the Japanese! Very interesting.

  • @kickinthepants.8950
    @kickinthepants.8950 2 роки тому +1

    I honestly love this channel no one bickers.
    My neighbor is from Tokyo so I watch one video a day to have something to talk to her about.
    She's a sweet little old lady.

  • @tturtle1659
    @tturtle1659 2 роки тому +19

    Errr... Shoes left at the entrance is also very common here in Austria, we wear sleepers inside. Makes perfect sense to me (particularly during winter time with all the mud/snow) and most people will _not_ be happy if you do not take off your shoes when coming into their homes, trust me! I think wearing shoes indoors is a UK/US (and other English-speaking countries) thing.

    • @susanmojgani9844
      @susanmojgani9844 2 роки тому

      Not all English speaking counties - in Canada people remove their shoes at the door.

    • @ruriva4931
      @ruriva4931 2 роки тому +3

      Even in US there are many households that don’t like people wearing shoes in the house. However it’s just not consistent. Like at my house my parents and I all don’t wear shoes but if we have guests over it’s fine if the don’t take off their shoes but usually the guests follow our customs. Generally when you go to someone’s house for the first time you would ask something like “should/can I take off my shoes?” But there is rarely ever a circumstance you would take off your shoes or where slippers/indoor shoes in a place that’s not a home like in Japan.

    • @psychedashell
      @psychedashell 2 роки тому +2

      Shoes left at the door is asking for some kind of bug to take up residence, bloody wolf spiders love them.

    • @Sundji
      @Sundji 2 роки тому +2

      I just think that with the invention of pavement and the fact that people mostly travel by vehicle now, your shoes just don't get as dirty so there's less incentive to care

    • @Pasharamus
      @Pasharamus 2 роки тому

      @@Sundji they don't get as dirty as before pavements but they still get dirty. I have walked barefoot in the city once, I cleaned my feet upon arriving home because they were dirty. And so are your shoes.

  • @mariaestrellitagonzales-me9798
    @mariaestrellitagonzales-me9798 2 роки тому +3

    Domo arigatou for this crucial infos about different footwear in the history of Japan❣️

  • @saintpaulsnail
    @saintpaulsnail 2 дні тому

    Well organized and informative

  • @Nina-Jaza
    @Nina-Jaza 2 роки тому +1

    Thank u so much! i love japanese culture so much and from the moment i started watching you ,you have made me like it even more

  • @mijaroprime9509
    @mijaroprime9509 2 роки тому +9

    I'm used to taking off my shoes before entering a house because that's common in my country so it wouldn't be a bother to me

  • @sydneyslaughter7163
    @sydneyslaughter7163 2 роки тому +6

    My cousins in the mountains always take off their shoes when entering my grandmother’s house. I never really knew why we were supposed to do that.

    • @Pasharamus
      @Pasharamus 2 роки тому +3

      but walking with dirty shoes inside supposedly clean house makes perfect sense?

    • @spindle7397
      @spindle7397 2 роки тому

      @@Pasharamus haha I know. From where I'm from its common sense to take off shoes

  • @matthewsherrell6226
    @matthewsherrell6226 2 роки тому

    Thanks for that bit of understanding!

  • @Fuzz82
    @Fuzz82 2 роки тому +2

    In the Netherlands, it is generally normal for guest to keep their shoes on indoors. Taking your shoes off as a guest can even be considered an invasion of privacy in some cases. It completely depends on on the situation though. If all is clean and you know your shoes are also, then it is okay to keep them on. But please take them off if it is muddy/snowy outside. Which I imagine is much more often the case in countries like Russia. I can totally imagine why Russians would remove their shoes at home,

  • @dareka9425
    @dareka9425 2 роки тому +3

    When I first started teaching years ago one of my seniors told me that Westerners are rude because they don't take their shoes in their houses and they called one another by their father's name(considered an insult in my country). I didn't even asked for that trivia but...ok. I could've retorted back that the Japanese also call each other by their family/last name but I was young so I just shrugged off his comments. There are reasons to other people's actions/culture and I have no right judge them based on my culture's standard.

  • @NiaJustNia
    @NiaJustNia 2 роки тому +44

    I couldn't imagine having to constantly keep shoes on, slippers and bare feet are so much more comfortable

    • @Balinux
      @Balinux 2 роки тому +2

      And completely unprotected.

    • @NiaJustNia
      @NiaJustNia 2 роки тому +1

      @@Balinux I have to constantly wear hard sole slippers atm because my MIL smashes things constantly, so your risk of cutting your feet is really high. I had a friend stay over and had to buy her slippers

    • @fireycostar9595
      @fireycostar9595 2 роки тому

      @@Balinux Callouses are usually formed to better protect from sharp rock and such.... think of it as flesh armor.

    • @Balinux
      @Balinux 2 роки тому +1

      @@fireycostar9595 Ye, no thanks.

    • @Sundji
      @Sundji 2 роки тому

      It's the opposite for me. I love shoes and would feel way more comfortable with them on anywhere that's not my house or the beach

  • @kileygarrett2141
    @kileygarrett2141 Рік тому

    Thank you for the captioning instructions! My auto-caps always goes to auto generate, and your captions are so helpful and informative!

  • @1copar
    @1copar 2 роки тому

    The walking on taka geta is just surreal, I saw it in a documentary once and the movement was mesmerising. Taka geta are stunning objects on their own.
    Your videos are so informative, the compact format is great and your presentation very charming. Thank you for putting so much effort and detail in them..you're joy to watch ad listen to.

  • @charliecat5686
    @charliecat5686 2 роки тому +3

    I love Zori and Geta!!! I live in the US but have gotten obsessed with Kimono and all the accessories. Keep up the great content! Thank you so much!

    • @hidematsumoto1708
      @hidematsumoto1708 2 роки тому

      im from the Netherlands and i also wear kimono and yukatta with zori or geta👘🙏

  • @Zushi_Tsunami
    @Zushi_Tsunami 2 роки тому +7

    Hello Shogo,
    I was wondering have you been watching the Olympics. If so what were your thoughts on the opening ceremony?

  • @agingerbeard
    @agingerbeard 2 роки тому +2

    Great video I learned so much. It's amazing how long some styles stayed the same! Thanks for sharing this 😃🖒

  • @balamx2802
    @balamx2802 2 роки тому

    You are an excellent teacher. I learn so much from your videos and your style of instruction makes it very enjoyable to watch.

  • @Idengard
    @Idengard 2 роки тому +9

    I can‘t imagine slippers with only a toe strap would be beneficial for running, fighting or even walking - also due to what you said, they make you focus more on your feet, how could you fight better when you constantly have to take care you don‘t lose your shoes? Also, they make you have to clamp your toes to them cos otherwise you‘d slip around on them. It makes for really awkward walking. Also, while the wooden slippers with the two blocks underneath are surely good for keeping your feet dry, I doubt they won‘t sink in on mud - you decrease the size of the parts your weight rests on, so if anything, they will make you more likely to sink in mud

    • @tacostastegreat5557
      @tacostastegreat5557 2 роки тому +3

      Bruh, have you tried it? You're talking to someone who has experienced it and has a profession in this

    • @quijybojanklebits8750
      @quijybojanklebits8750 2 роки тому

      @@tacostastegreat5557 ever run in flipflops? It's a recipe for disaster.

    • @tacostastegreat5557
      @tacostastegreat5557 2 роки тому

      @@quijybojanklebits8750 I've hiked and climbed snow in slides, you can do it fine with practice.

  • @DARIVSARCHITECTVS
    @DARIVSARCHITECTVS 2 роки тому

    The you for yet another valuable lesson in Japanese culture, Shogo! I have been to Japan several times in my youth as a cargo ship sailor, and your videos provide a great insight into the rich culture of Japan.

  • @lucionemesis
    @lucionemesis 11 днів тому

    So interesting. Thank you.

  • @foderator8277
    @foderator8277 2 роки тому +3

    i want to try try that straw sandals since I started reading Vagabond

  • @bendirval3612
    @bendirval3612 2 роки тому +11

    You didn't mention that they probably had less leather around due to the large number of vegetarians.

    • @cecilyerker
      @cecilyerker 2 роки тому +4

      You also don’t have as much inland land mass to graze livestock

  • @chrismaws6801
    @chrismaws6801 2 роки тому

    Wow thank you this is very informative and I like the smile respect and understanding of countries outside Japan in your videos.

  • @BarryB.Benson
    @BarryB.Benson 2 роки тому +1

    In Canada, it’s totally customary to take your shoes off when coming into a house, mainly because of the weather, you just don’t want to be walking around in the snow and mud and then walk into a house carrying all that dirty wetness into the house.

  • @JM-gs8vi
    @JM-gs8vi 2 роки тому +5

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF THE ROUND HAT THE SAMURAIS USED TO WEAR?!?!!? IVE BEEN LOOKING FOR THAT INFO EVERYWHERE!

    • @Mamoru0Hasukage
      @Mamoru0Hasukage 2 роки тому +6

      I can save you some trouble: hats or Kasa (which can also be translated as umbrella) don't have any special origins. Simply put, there were various types such as Jingasa which were worn by ashigaru (foot soldier, commonly not of samurai lineage) which were more or less cheap helmets in the shape of a kasa made of material like copper and wood.
      You also have Amigasa which are the woven rice hats you probably think of first. Normally a farmer's work hat, some ronin would wear them as well to stay in the shade. There are ronin gasa which can often hide the face, for who would want to show a known samurai's face if he no longer has his lord? Ronin often were treated as vagabonds and unsavory folk.
      The only type that has a unique story to it (other than kasa with family Mon, or crests on them) are Takuhatsugasa. These were speciality kasa made in the shape of a mushroom worn by monks to hide their identity so they can practice their religion and jobs without pressure from others. It covers two thirds of the face so getting eye contact wasn't as easy. An example of this style that comes to mind are any monk characters or characters wearing monks clothes. Say, muramasa in ninja gaiden 2 when he comes out of nowhere to help Ryu Hayabusa. That hat he wears in the scene is this type. A similar type to this is the bucket style kasa called the Fukamigasa. These, much like the previously mentioned takuhatsugasa, were meant for keeping identities hidden but were more like bucket styled masks and hats.
      There really isn't much to the origins, outside of the impact of Confucianism and Chinese cultural queues in around 600-700 ad. Remember, before such an event, Japan was primarily a country of hunters and gatherers as well as farmers. Now, it's possible they had kasa prior, but it is so ingrained into their history, there really isn't much of any special stories. Ultimately, it was simply hats used for either farm work, or identity hiding.

    • @wissamalhashemi5548
      @wissamalhashemi5548 2 роки тому +1

      ​@@Mamoru0Hasukage It's nice to see someone like me who also comments on people's comments with long explanations of things, I appreciate you man, even though I have no interest in the subject mentioned at all lol
      +rep

    • @Mamoru0Hasukage
      @Mamoru0Hasukage 2 роки тому +1

      @@wissamalhashemi5548 xD a fair interpretation and appreciated none the less. I'm passionate about japanese history, so if it makes shogo's job a bit easier, I'm all for it xD

  • @Stormcrow41
    @Stormcrow41 2 роки тому +5

    How did Japanese people walk in the snow without getting their feet cold and wet? From what I've seen online, it looks like they wear insulated socks and gaiters but they don't look waterproof at all.

    • @BltchErica
      @BltchErica 2 роки тому +2

      You shouldn't be surprised that their feet got wet, even today people struggle to keep their feet dry in the snow, good waterproof boots are expensive.

  • @BltchErica
    @BltchErica 2 роки тому +20

    I can't believe you have to give a historical reason for why Japanese people don't wear shoes indoors. When you wear your shoes indoors and get the floor dirty your home no longer feels like a home.

  • @immanuellimbong4802
    @immanuellimbong4802 2 роки тому +5

    as Indonesian, we have same culture to take off the shoes before entering the house, everybody in Indonesia always to do it.

  • @kljawn212
    @kljawn212 2 роки тому +1

    Very educational video, and very well organized. Thank you

  • @LOKO22Bach
    @LOKO22Bach 2 роки тому

    Really interesting, I love the presentation and format.

  • @nostromo9743
    @nostromo9743 2 роки тому +4

    What are thoooooooooose?!

  • @mauxmere
    @mauxmere 2 роки тому +4

    I just realized waraji sounds a lot like huarache. I wonder if there is some shared etimology root

  • @lennyramirez51
    @lennyramirez51 2 роки тому

    Oh my!! I always wonder about those shoes,but now,I have you to give me inside about your beautiful culture!! Thank You🙏🥰

  • @sharonbelcher9635
    @sharonbelcher9635 2 роки тому

    I am enjoying your videos so much
    I love learning culture of other countries. I had seen about the shoes in a movie but you really really make it easy to understand.

  • @donavanalexander5236
    @donavanalexander5236 2 роки тому +8

    I wish I could always wear slippers

    • @peteengard9966
      @peteengard9966 2 роки тому

      I've worn steel toed work boots six days a week up to sixteen hours a day for over 45 years. Now I wear a pair of Crocs and love them.

  • @eileennono5039
    @eileennono5039 2 роки тому +3

    I'm a nisei living in Canada and I remember being shocked when I went to people's homes and they didn't take their shoes off. Or if somebody came to my house and tried to walk in with shoes.
    That said, I tie my shoes pretty loosely so I can take them on and put them on without touching them. So most of my shoes became glorified slippers anyway.

  • @EscapeYourFate7
    @EscapeYourFate7 2 роки тому +1

    Wow. This information was presented so well I am just sitting here in awe. Thank you for this and all of your content

  • @tonyg_fgc8152
    @tonyg_fgc8152 2 роки тому

    Very well made video! Thank you!

  • @mythologiasend3264
    @mythologiasend3264 2 роки тому +3

    I can't imagine wearing this type of shoes to walk more than 5 minutes. To me is REALLY hard to run in slippers, they slip away too easily and is hard to control movements.

    • @cecilyerker
      @cecilyerker 2 роки тому +1

      You can’t run in kimono anyway

  • @brandoferg6460
    @brandoferg6460 2 роки тому +5

    I’m American like 100% and I must say if you walk in my house with your outside shoes on , you will be berated. I don’t trust people who allow outside shoes inside.

  • @louislamonte334
    @louislamonte334 2 роки тому

    I love wearing geta, setta & zori! I also love traditional Japanese men's clothing!! Thank you for your very fascinating channel! Happiest of New Year's!

  • @NatashaHoney
    @NatashaHoney 2 роки тому

    Really informative and the structure made it so easy to understand, I learned a lot. I'll have to subscribe!

  • @williammunny9206
    @williammunny9206 2 роки тому +3

    love the samurai culture... chosen for their skills, not their birthright like the knights in Europe if I understand things correctly

    • @Nobody_Cares913
      @Nobody_Cares913 2 роки тому +1

      You didn't need to be born blue blooded to become a knight, it just helped getting there faster.

    • @MarcPiery
      @MarcPiery 2 роки тому +4

      Nope. They were born into it. The samurai were a class of nobility. Feudalism is feudalism.

    • @josephwolf7801
      @josephwolf7801 2 роки тому

      Samurai wete born into their class and there were different tiers in the class. Yes someone below the class or within could be made a higher rank but it was rare. To do such you had to prove you were damn good at what your lord wanted and even then higher ranked samurai may be displeased by it.

    • @AeolethNionian
      @AeolethNionian 2 роки тому

      Not to mention a knight would be raised learning the skills. A peasant would be raised tilling the knight's fields. A peasant and a knight might be of similar strength but it would be like pitting a pro mma fighter against a football player but the football player gets his father's hand me downs and the knight gets shiny new gear specifically tailored to him. People rising above their classes in feudalism is fantasy save for a few exemplary exceptions.

    • @wchan39
      @wchan39 2 роки тому

      @@AeolethNionian Makes you wonder if those 'rare' exceptions are what caused those fantasies to exist in the first place.

  • @luthaeris1
    @luthaeris1 2 роки тому +6

    Why do you have to take off shoes in the house?? Simple, hygiene🤷

    • @slimetank394
      @slimetank394 2 роки тому +1

      The real question is why the hell would you wear your outdoor shoes inside your house? Especially if you or your family member care enough to clean the floors.

  • @innovati
    @innovati 11 днів тому

    Excellent video!

  • @sushirabbit167
    @sushirabbit167 2 роки тому +2

    Just saw your video pop up in my home feed and I loved it! Great content. Adding to my subs for sure!

  • @impswarm5577
    @impswarm5577 2 роки тому +5

    Can we all agree that wearing shoes inside a house is an only USA thing and in every other country you dont walk with dirty shoes inside?

    • @srajanverma9064
      @srajanverma9064 2 роки тому

      true true!!

    • @Sundji
      @Sundji 2 роки тому

      why are your shoes getting dirty regularly?

    • @impswarm5577
      @impswarm5577 2 роки тому

      @@Sundji because i have to touch the ground with my shoes ^^ i cant fly

    • @WanJae42
      @WanJae42 2 роки тому +2

      I know far more people who wear shoes in the house in England than the US. So, no, can't agree with your generalization.

    • @srajanverma9064
      @srajanverma9064 2 роки тому

      @@WanJae42 the question is why do they do that?

  • @unknownnbased1745
    @unknownnbased1745 2 роки тому

    This video was extremely intriguing and informative

  • @edwardoowew
    @edwardoowew 2 роки тому +1

    In the Philippines, we also take off our shoes, sandals, slippers and etc. whenever we go inside our homes or someone's home because it's our way of showing respect to the house owner and to the house itself.