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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56 THE WEARING OF ARMOUR chap, in
without allowing these plates to escape from under the genouil-
lière. The coude is sometimes pivoted in the same manner, but
more often it is rigid and of such circumference that the arm can
bend within it and yet be very adequately protected. In the
overlapping lames or strips of metal which give ease of move-
ment to the upper arm, the hands, the waist, and the foot, we
find that much careful work and calculation was needed to ensure
comfort to the wearer. On the foot, the toepiece and four or more
arches of metal overlap upwards on to a broader arch, while above
this three or more arches overlap downwards, thus allowing the
toe-joint and ankle to be bent at the same time (Fig. 26). In.
a suit in the Tower, made for Prince Henry, son of James I, all
the arches of the soleret overlap downwards. This points to
a certain decadence in the craftsmanship of the armourer of the
period, though the excuse might be offered for him that the suit
was intended only for use on horseback. There are generally one,
two, or more of these movable lames joining the genouillière to
the jamb, and above this the cuisse to the genouillière to give
greater flexibility to the knee fastenings. The separate arm- and
leg-pieces are, when made in two halves, to encircle the limb,
hinged on the outside and closed with strap and buckle, or with
locking hook or bolt on the inside. This, of course, is to ensure
greater protection to these fastenings, especially on horseback.
Higher up again we get the tuilles or taces, which, from the fact
that to adapt themselves to the human form they must narrow
at the waist and spread out below, overlap upwards. From
the taces are hung the tassets, with strap and buckle, which
give increased protection to the upper leg, and yet are not in
any way rigid. When the tassets are made of more than one
plate they are attached to each other by a most ingenious
arrangement of straps and sliding rivets. On the inner edge of
each plate the rivets are attached to a strap on the under
side ; but the outer edge, requiring more compression of the
lames together, is furnished with rivets fixed firmly in the upper-
most plate and working loose in a slot in the back plate, thus