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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INTRODUCTION
As a subject for careful study and exhaustive investigation
perhaps no detail of human existence can be examined with quite
the same completeness as can the defensive armour and weapons
of past ages. Most departments of Literature, Science, and Art
are still living realities ; each is still developing and is subject to
evolution as occasion demands ; and for this reason our knowledge
of these subjects cannot be final, and our researches can only be
brought, so to speak, up to date. The Defensive Armour of
Europe, however, has its definite limitations so surely set that
we can surround our investigations with permanent boundaries,
which, as far as human mind can judge, will never be enlarged.
We can look at our subject as a whole and can see its whole length
and breadth spread out before us. In other aspects of life we can
only limit our studies from day to day as invention or discovery
push farther their conquering march ; but, in dealing with the
armour of our ancestors, we know that although we may still
indulge in theories as to ancient forms and usages, we have very
definitely before us in the primitive beginnings, the gradual
development, the perfection, and the decadence or passing away,
an absolutely unique progression and evolution which we can
find in no other condition of life.
The survival of the fittest held good of defensive armour until
that very fitness was found to be a. source rather of weakness
than of strength, owing to changed conditions of warfare , and
then the mighty defences of steel, impervious to sword, lance,
and arrow, passed away, to remain only as adjuncts of Parade and
Pageant, or as examples in museums of a lost art in warfare and
military history. As an aid to the study of History our interest