Citations:pigache


 * 1898, James Henry Ramsay, The Foundations of England: 1066-1154, page 191:
 * Another new fashion - much condemned by the clergy - were the long-toed shoes, with points like horns (pigacie, Fr. pigaces or pigaches). This conceit, of French origin, had been carried to its height at the court ...
 * 2009, Janetta Rebold Benton, Materials, Methods, and Masterpieces of Medieval Art, ABC-CLIO (ISBN 9780275994181), page 228:
 * As these paintings make evident, the opposite end of the body was emphasized for a gentleman, the length of his feet enhanced by the pointed shoes known as poulaines or pigaches.
 * 2014, Klaus Carl, Shoes, Parkstone International (ISBN 9781781609484)
 * In the early 12th century shoes became longer. A Knight named Robert Le Cornu is credited with introducing shoes called pigaches which were forerunners of the poulaine style.
 * 2015, Marie-Josèphe Bossan, The Art of the Shoe, Parkstone International (ISBN 9781783107339), page 18:
 * In the early 12th century, shoes became longer. Called pigaches...
 * 2019, Marie-Josèphe Bossan, The Art of the Shoe, Parkstone International (ISBN 9781644618257), page 307:
 * Pigage or Pigache... Shoe of the 12th century, with a pointed and hooked toe, sometimes decorated with a little bell and whose style goes back to antiquity.