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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THE WEARING OF ARMOUR
CHAP. Ill
allowing an expansion or contraction of half an inch or more to each
lame. It is somewhat difficult to explain this ingenious arrangement
in words, but Fig. 27 will show how the straps and rivets are set.
When the tassets were discarded about the end of the sixteenth
century the cuisses were laminated in this way from waist to knee.
The gauntlet is generally found with a stiff cuff, and from
wrist to knuckles the plates in narrow arches overlap towards the
arm, where they join a wider plate which underlaps the cuff.
The knuckle-plate is usually ridged with a rope-shaped crest or
with bosses imitating the knuckles. The fingers are protected by
Fig. 26. Soleret.
Side. Back. Front.
Fig. 27. Method of using sliding rivets.
small plates, from four on the fourth finger to six on the second
finger (in some examples there are more or less), which overlap
from knuckle to finger-tip. The thumb is covered in like manner,
but has a lozenge-shaped plate to connect it to the cuff. This
metal hand-covering was sewn on to a leather glove or attached
to it with leather loops (Fig. 28). The vambrace is generally rigid,
either a solid tube or hinged- on the outside and fastened on the
inside by straps or hooks. It is held to the lower edge of the coude
by a rivet. The lower portion of the rerebrace is also tubular, while
the upper portion, where it joins the pauldron, is often laminated,
with the plates overlapping, downwards as a rule, though there
are instances of these plates overlapping upwards. They are
joined in the same way as the laminated tassets by a riveted strap
on the inner side, and by sliding rivets at the back, thus giving
the arm freedom of movement forwards in the direction most
needed, but less freedom towards the back.