If you are stuck at home sometime on a quiet, rainy day, you might want to take a look at this site and experience some wonderful old b&w arms & arnour photos. They are from the " Elenco delle opere secondo il Catalogo Angelucci (1890)" and are available here .....
http://www.artito.arti.beniculturali.it/Armer...13.asp?L=A
which is part of the " L'Armeria Reale di Torino" ( thats Torino, Italy, not the one in Madrid, Spain) here...
http://www.artito.arti.beniculturali.it/Armer...rmeria.htm
For convienience, I have included a translated page of the contents of the Catalogue which uses an Alphabetical list, Its shoud be pointed out that the contents of each group belong to the letter on the left and not on the right hand side.....
Enjoy !
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Human translation
First three series, A. A’. e A’’. are dedicated to “classical” weapons made out of stone, bronze and iron.
Series B. is for complete armours for foot and horse combat,
Series C. armour parts,
Series D. horse's pertainings,
Series E. helms,
Series F. shields,
Series G. swords,
Series H. daggers,
Series I. hitting weapons = maces and hammers
Series J. polearms
Series L. launch weapons
Series M. long firearms
Series N. short firearms
Serie N’ gun’s parts and accessories
Series O flags
Serie P models,
Series Q. diverse objects
Series S. weapons and objects belonging to King Carlo Alberto
Series T. weapons and objects belonged to King Vittorio Emanuele II
Series U. weapons and objects belonged to King Umberto I.
Series K. WW1 weapons,
Series K’. WW2 weapons
Series R. weapons and objects belonged to King Vittorio Emanuele III.
NOTICE
There seems to be just a very low number of objects available online, at least if I browse with Mozilla I see just a page for letter.
First three series, A. A’. e A’’. are dedicated to “classical” weapons made out of stone, bronze and iron.
Series B. is for complete armours for foot and horse combat,
Series C. armour parts,
Series D. horse's pertainings,
Series E. helms,
Series F. shields,
Series G. swords,
Series H. daggers,
Series I. hitting weapons = maces and hammers
Series J. polearms
Series L. launch weapons
Series M. long firearms
Series N. short firearms
Serie N’ gun’s parts and accessories
Series O flags
Serie P models,
Series Q. diverse objects
Series S. weapons and objects belonging to King Carlo Alberto
Series T. weapons and objects belonged to King Vittorio Emanuele II
Series U. weapons and objects belonged to King Umberto I.
Series K. WW1 weapons,
Series K’. WW2 weapons
Series R. weapons and objects belonged to King Vittorio Emanuele III.
NOTICE
There seems to be just a very low number of objects available online, at least if I browse with Mozilla I see just a page for letter.
Bruno Giordan wrote: |
Human translation
NOTICE There seems to be just a very low number of objects available online, at least if I browse with Mozilla I see just a page for letter. |
Hi Bruno... Thanks for the human touch on translation ! Did you get to go through most of the letters...some dont have much while others are full of great stuff ! I saved about 300 items and Im still going. I have found that some of the items provide a visual answer to some of the questions that have been asked on various A&A forums including myArmoury.
I installed Mozilla Firefox out of interrest and then ran the pages side by side but I cant see any difference except the Mozilla typeface is bigger.......Im running XP, mabye Im doing something wrong ?
Cheers Bruno...
I'm still finding amazing stuff, and most of the photo-quality is really excellent.......... check out this all steel little Crossbow......
http://www.artito.arti.beniculturali.it/Armer...ivo=PP1784
http://www.artito.arti.beniculturali.it/Armer...ivo=PP1784
Maybe some problems with my sight ... too little thing get unnoticed by me even with glasses. Aging process has definitely started ...
Here to help anyway if terminology seems abstruse, keep in mind that classic archeology in Italy uses a nineteenth century style language.
Here to help anyway if terminology seems abstruse, keep in mind that classic archeology in Italy uses a nineteenth century style language.
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