Wow, good catch! It took me a solid 5 minutes of staring at the photo to figure out what you meant. At first glance, they just look like regular buckle brogues. I really had to squint to see the leather tabs up above and behind the ankle (coming up to short-boot height) and the laces attached to them. I've never seen anything like it, aside from the corny "ghillie boots" sold by Ren-faire outfits as an attempt to make a Scottish ghillie brogue into a Ren-faire boot.
But this photo of yours seems to suggest that there was a Victorian equivalent to the ankle boots that were common back then. Where did this photo come from?
Apologies for dragging this away from its original intent but I thought the full photo was worth sharing.
Thanks for complete studio shot. I may be loosing the thread. Could I suggest that perhaps these particular Fashionable style
of ghillies were worn on Victorian Scottish Highland Estates. Estate wear was perhaps different to City wear. Perhaps these
shoes were a more sturdy form of Victorian Footwear........Roderick
That is an interesting shoe for sure. I expect the heel being so tall would accommodate paved streets instead of barn yards unless the lacing from the back was meant to counteract getting stuck in the mire. The thickness of the soles could provide long time wear. Tis a bit dressy for my tastes and budget as I am a terror on footwear.
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