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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90
HORSE ARMOUR
CHAP. V
and usually has a holder for a plume. On the forehead are often
shown the arms of the owner or a tapered spike. Angellucci, in
his preface to the Catalogue of the Turin Armoury, differentiates
between the chamfron (tesera) and the Frontale or plate protecting
the front of the head alone. There are fine suits of Gothic horse
armour both in the Musée d’Artillerie in Paris and also in the
Wallace Collection at Hertford House. The latter is one of the
best-arranged mounted suits in existence. The different pieces
of the horse armour bear the delicate sweeping lines embossed on
the surface in the same way that the armour of the man is treated.
The restored linings of leather and skin show how the horse was
protected from the chafing of the metal. The Peytral or Poitrel
is hung from the neck and withers, and is frequently provided with
large bosses, called Bossoirs, Pezoneras, or Glancing-knobs, to direct
the lance-thrust away from the horse. It is often hinged in three
pieces. The Flanchards hang from the saddle on either side, and
are sometimes, as on Plate IV and the Frontispiece, curved upwards
in the centre to admit of the use of the spur. The back of the
horse is protected by the Croupière or Crupper, which is made up
of several pieces riveted or hinged together. The root of the tail
is covered by a tubular plate called the Gardequeue, which is often
moulded into the form of a dragon or dolphin. All these plates
were lined with leather or wadded with cotton to prevent chafing.
Often, however, cuirbouilli was used instead of metal and was richly
decorated with painting and gilding. A picture of the Battle of
Pavia in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, shows many of these
painted bards, and the same material is doubtless intended in the
relief of the Battle of Brescia on the Visconti monument at Pavia.
These leather bards have entirely disappeared and are not to be
found in any collections except for a portion of a crupper of this
material in the Tower. The saddle, with its high Arciones or
peaks, back and front, was in itself an efficacious protection for
the waist and loins. The term Cantie is sometimes used for either
plate, but it is generally accepted as the name for the rear peak.
Both this part and the front plate are often covered with metal.