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  1. Finish the semester strong with Britannica. Footbinding, cultural practice, existing in China from the 10th century until the establishment of the Peoples Republic of China in 1949, that involved tightly bandaging the feet of women to alter their shape for aesthetic purposes. Footbinding usually began when girls were between 4 and 6 years.

  2. Sep 4, 2015 · The last bound-feet women of China - in photographs Adult human feet reduced to 10cm-long stumps – the fabled “golden lily feet” – were the most prized. Ultimately, it was all about male ...

  3. Jun 19, 2015 · Zhao Hua Hong's feet. "It was a societal pressure. All the other girls in the village had their feet bound." Jo Farrell. Su Xi Rong's feet. "They didn't want to be left out. They wanted to ensure ...

  4. Sep 16, 2013 · For around ten centuries, successive generations of Chinese women endured a practice when, as children, their feet were systematically broken and shaped in such a way that they resembled hooves ...

  5. Jo Farrell. Foot binding - the art of binding a woman's foot for many years until it becomes small and altered in form and shape from its original state - was practised in China for centuries before it died out. Photographer and academic Jo Farrell has spent over a decade painstakingly documenting women of China who have had their foot bound.

  6. May 17, 2017 · Carried out on girls as young as four, the practice involves breaking toes to manipulate the feet into a lotus shape. Foot-binding, as it is known, was first carried out 1,000 years ago.

  7. Jan 16, 2021 · At that time a woman with a pair of small feet was regarded as a beauty. Though it caused severe pain, many women bound their feet to follow the custom. Bound feet were called "lotuses", ranked according to foot size. Feet longer than 4 cun (pronounced /tswnn/ 寸, "the Chinese inch", is a Chinese unit of length, equal to 3⅓ cm) were ranked ...

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