Suit of armor
Anyone have an idea of what era this armor might be from and the country of origin? I am sure it is a replica but it was probably copied from a known armor, if you have any ideas let me know, thanks.


 Attachment: 33.48 KB
European armor.jpg


 Attachment: 29.68 KB
European armor2.jpg

Re: Suit of armor
It's sort of a crude amalgamation of Gothic and Renaissance (mid-1500s) styling. The one-piece hanging tassets are an early Gothic style, and can be seen on lots of funeral effigies, but by the 1500s would have been replaced by a combination of articulated tassets and cuisses. The severe angles of the gauntlets are also pseudo-Gothic, and the semi-pointed sabatons as well. I am talking about a mid-1400s era style here. The helmet is an imitation of an armet although I doubt that it actually unhinges at the chin the way a real armet's cheek pieces would. This kind of helmet is mid to late 1500s era. The one-piece, non-articulated pauldrons are, to my mind, ahistorical and very fake looking.

This armour is a display piece; I think there is one giant factory that cranks them all out. I know I've seen them for sale on multiple websites, usually for a couple of thousand dollars.
Re: Suit of armor
Adam D. Kent-Isaac wrote:
It's sort of a crude amalgamation of Gothic and Renaissance (mid-1500s) styling. The one-piece hanging tassets are an early Gothic style, and can be seen on lots of funeral effigies, but by the 1500s would have been replaced by a combination of articulated tassets and cuisses. The severe angles of the gauntlets are also pseudo-Gothic, and the semi-pointed sabatons as well. I am talking about a mid-1400s era style here. The helmet is an imitation of an armet although I doubt that it actually unhinges at the chin the way a real armet's cheek pieces would. This kind of helmet is mid to late 1500s era. The one-piece, non-articulated pauldrons are, to my mind, ahistorical and very fake looking.

This armour is a display piece; I think there is one giant factory that cranks them all out. I know I've seen them for sale on multiple websites, usually for a couple of thousand dollars.
Thanks, I was just trying to find out if it was historically accurate at all or just a fantasy piece, I think you answered my question.
Hi Folks!

age and region? i too would say: India and 20th-21st century at best...

Such pieces reassemble what most people think a "medieval Knight" should look like.

greetings
Andreas
Hi Eric, as others have said this is really more " medievalesque " than anything. There was a fashion for similar armour for decorating foyers an dens in the Victorian era as well. This is more what the general public thought a fully armoured knight looked like rather than being based on an actual in period style of plate. This particluar suit is I believe made by a company in Spain who's been making exactly this decorator harness for something like 50 years or so.

Page 1 of 1

Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum




All contents © Copyright 2003-2006 myArmoury.com — All rights reserved
Discussion forums powered by phpBB © The phpBB Group
Switch to the Full-featured Version of the forum