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. IV
PLATE ARMOUR
77
this form of arming for the joust. The great helm is firmly screwed
to the back and breast, the two holes on the left side of the breast-
plate are for the attachment of the shield, the rigid bridle-cuff
covers the left hand, and the curved elbow-guard—this is not the
passe-guard—protects the bend of the left arm as the poldermitton
protects the right. The large circular disc defends the vif de I’har-
nois, and is bouché or notched at its lower end to allow the lance
to be couched, resting on the curved lance-rest in front and lodged
under the Queue at the back. The legs, in this variety of joust,
were not armed; for the object of the jousters was to unhorse
each other, and it was necessary to have perfect freedom in gripping
the horse’s sides. Sometimes a great plate of metal, curved to
cover the leg, was worn to protect the wearer from the shock of
impact. This was called the Dilge, or Tilting Cuisse, which is shown
on Plate VIII behind the figure of Count Sigismond, and also on
Plate VII. The large-bowed saddle also was used for this end.
There is one of these saddles in the Tower which measures nearly
5 feet in height. Behind the saddle-bow are two rings which
encircled the rider’s legs. It is needless to point out that in this
form of joust the object was to break lances and not to unhorse ;
for, if the latter were intended, the rider stood a good chance of
breaking his legs owing to his rigid position in the saddle.
The Tonlet suit (Fig. 35) was used solely for fighting on foot.
The bell-shaped skirt of plate was so constructed with the sliding
rivets or straps which have been before referred to, that it could
be pulled up and down. Sometimes the lower lame could be taken
off altogether. When fighting with axes or swords in the lists this
plate skirt presented a glancing surface to the weapon and pro-
tected the legs. The tonlet is variously called by writers upon
armour, Bases, Lamboys, or Jamboys ; of the two latter terms
jamboys is the more correct. The Bases were originally the cloth
skirts in vogue in civilian dress at the time of Henry VIII, and
when defensive armour followed civilian fashion the name came
to be applied to the steel imitation.
Towards the end of the sixteenth century we find the weight