Armor

Item

Title
Armor
Description
This armor was assembled and restored under the direction of Dr. Bashford Dean in the 1920s, when it was part of his private collection. It consists of elements mostly from Chalcis, such as those exhibited in the vitrines to the left and right. Dean's intent was to present a full armor of the style worn about 1400, a period from which no complete armors survive. Distinctive features are the early form of brigandine (a torso defense constructed of plates riveted inside a doublet) and the brass borders on the edges of the exposed plates of the other parts of the armor. Portions of the brass at the top edge of the left cuisse (thigh defense), the lower edges of the right greave (lower leg defense), and the visor are genuine; the remainder of the brass is restored. The helmet, a visored bascinet, is not from Chalcis. The velvet covering of the brigandine is a restoration of the early twentieth century.
Identifier
29.154.3
Contributor
Dr. Bashford Dean
Spatial Coverage
Italy
Date
ca. 1400–1450
Subject
Armor, Medieval
Medium
Steel, copper alloy, textile, leather
Extent
Height - 66 1/2 in. (168.9 cm)
Weight - 41 lb. (18.6 kg)
Temporal Coverage
Armor was assembled and restored in the 1920's
Relation
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/23205
Provenance
Bashford Dean Memorial Collection, Gift of Helen Fahnestock Hubbard, in memory of her father, Harris C. Fahnestock, 1929
Rights
This work is in the public domain