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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6o
THE WEARING OF ARMOUR
CHAP. Ill
The Gorget (Fig. 30) is made in two halves, each composed of
a single plate or, sometimes, of two or three horizontal lames.
The two portions are united by a loose-working rivet on the left
side and are joined by a turning pin on the right. The gorget was
worn either over or under the breast- and backplates.
Perhaps the most ingeniously contrived suit in existence,
which completely protects the wearer and at the same time
follows the anatomical construction of the human body, is that
made for Henry VIII for fighting on foot in the lists. It is num-
bered xxviii in the Armoury of the Tower. There are no parts
of the body or limbs left uncovered by plate, and every separate
portion fits closely to its neighbour with sliding rivets and turning
pins to give the necessary play for the limbs. It is composed of
235 pieces and weighs 93 lb.
The wearing of the bascinet, salade, burgonet, and like helmets
needs no detailed description. In the preceding chapter we noticed
the method of attaching the camail to the bascinet. When the
great helm was made a fixture in the fifteenth century, as distinct
from the loose or chained helms of preceding periods, it was either
bolted to the breast and back, as on Plate VII, or it was fastened
by an adjustable plate which shut over a locking pin, as shown
on Plate V, 5, and a somewhat similar arrangement at the back,
or a strap and buckle, held it firmly in place, while if extra rigidity
was needed it was supplied by straps from the shoulders to the
lugs shown in the drawing of the Brocas Helm on Plate V. The
Armet, or close helmet, fits the shape of the head to such an extent
that it must be opened to be put on. This is arranged by hingeing
the side plates to the centre, and, when fixed, fastening them with
a screw at the back to which a circular disc is added as a protection
to this fastening (Fig. 31). The armet shown on Plate V opens in
the front and when closed is fastened with a spring hook. The
different parts of the armet are the Ventail, A, and Vue, B, which
together make the Visor ; the Skull, c ; and the Beavor, D
(Plate V, 6).
Having now arrived at some understanding of the construction