Or as they're more daintily known, anklets.
They're loaded with connotations, these encircling bands, beads, and bells, and no wonder, given that they're as ancient as adornment itself. The very first versions were arguably of gut or vine or twisted stems of flowers, decoratively braided, hung with shell, drawing attention to the grace and articulation of the ankles, in particular as they dance.
A girl could make one out of the simplest of materials, and no doubt did since the earliest days. Which is why it's odd that today, for many of us, ankle bracelets still hold associations with a femme fatale, and a trashy one at that, especially as worn with a pointy-toed stiletto.
For this we can blame Barbara Stanwyck, who, in the film Double Indemnity, hooked poor dumb Fred MacMurray with a flash of goldplate chain making its slow, seductive way down a set of stairs.
This example, made of beads, feathers and porcupine quills, from a tribe on the Canadian High Plains, would have left its wearer far more nimble.
If you're disposed to try one on for yourself, consider these historical versions as the outer edge of inspiration. But be bold! If you choose well, and you might inspire an epic, as one young lady did 1,700 years ago.