Armour & Weapons
Forfatter: Charles Ffoulkes
År: 1909
Forlag: At The Clarendon Press
Sted: Oxford
Sider: 112
UDK: 623 Ffou
With A Preface By Viscount Dillon, V.P.S.A. Curator Of The Tower Armouries
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CHAP. VI
THE DECADENCE
99
The last official use of full plate armour was at the Coronation
of George IV, when the King’s Champion, Dymoke, entered West-
minster Hall and threw down the gauntlet to challenge those who
disputed the King’s right to the crown. The suit worn on this
occasion belonged originally to Sir Christopher Hatton, Captain of
the Guard to Queen Elizabeth, and was made by Jacobe,1 whose
designs for armour have been referred to in Chapter III. The suit
is now in the Guard Room at Windsor. The Guardia Nobile of
the Pope still wear the picturesque half armour of the sixteenth
century. The cuirass and helmet of the Household Cavalry of the
present day are not survivals, for they were introduced at the
time of the Coronation of George IV.
The study of defensive armour and weapons must of necessity
need much careful comparison of examples and investigation of
documentary evidence, but, even when undertaken only super-
ficially, it will add greatly to the interest of modern history and of
the arts of war. Costume can only be studied from pictorial and
sculptured records, but in the case of armour we have, after
a certain period, actual examples not only of historical but also of
personal interest. With modern methods of arrangement and
with the expert care of those most learned in this subject these
examples will be an ever-present record which may be examined
with more interest than might be bestowed upon many branches
of the applied arts ; because, in addition to the interest centred
in the personality of the wearers, we have the sure signs of the
master-craftsman which are always evident in good craftsmanship,
and, not infrequently, the sign-manual of the worker himself.
1 Considered to be the same as Topf,
G 2