IDENTIFIERS ----------- id: 17769 accession number: HEN.M.9E-1933 DATE AUDIT ---------- created: Saturday 6 August 2011 updated: Friday 8 January 2016 DESCRIPTIVE DATA ---------------- object type: Two long tassets nearly forming a pair, for infantry use, extending to just above the knees. Each formed of six upward-overlapping lames of which the sixth is considerably deeper than the rest and has a strongly convex lower edge. The lames are transversely curved. The curvature increases towards the lower end of the tasset. The inner ends of the first and second lames are cut away in a shallow, concave curve. They and the lower edge of the sixth lame are decorated with file-roped inward turns. The inner ends of the fourth and sixth lames of the left tasset are decorated with single incised lines, possibly representing the remains of borders that have subsequently been cut away. The lower corners of the first to fifth lames are either cropped or rounded. The lames are connected to one another at their outer ends by modern, round-headed sliding-rivets with either circular or octagonal internal washers. The lames were formerly connected to one another at their centres and inner ends by internal leathers secured to the first to fifth lames by single externally-flush rivets, and to the sixth lame by pairs of round-headed rivets with circular internal washers, except at the centre of the sixth lame of the left tasset where only a single round-headed rivet and circular internal washer is employed. The modern leathers are incomplete at the upper end of the centre of the right tasset and represented only by fragments on the left tasset. The surviving fragments show that the modern leathers were in each case secured to the sixth lame by a single rivet and internal washer. In those cases where the leather was originally secured by a pair of rivets, the unused hole has been plugged by a round-headed rivet without an internal washer. To compensate for the loss of the inner leather of the left tasset, the lames of that tasset have been rigidly secured to one another by modern pan-headed rivets that pass through the holes for the leathering-rivets and overlying construction-holes. The construction-holes of the right tasset are occupied by modern, purely decorative, round-headed rivets. The inner ends of the fifth and sixth lames of the right tasset were at some time rigidly riveted to one another, as were the inner ends of the second and third lames, the fourth and fifth lames, and the fifth and sixth lames of the left tassets. The later holes for the rivets are now vacant. Secured by a single rivet at either end of the first lames of each tasset is a modern, double-edged, tongued, iron buckle with an iron hasp. The rivets are flat-headed, except in the case of that which secures the inner buckle of the right tasset, which is externally-flush. The buckles vary considerably in their individual form and detail. Each tasset may at one time have been equipped with a third buckle, now represented only by a vacant rivet-hole located midway between the two buckles now present. Rivet-holes located just above and to the inside of each of the buckles of the right tasset, just above and just below and to the outside of the outer buckle of the left tasset probably represent the former attachment-points of suspension-buckles. The holes located just above and to the inside of the outer buckle of the right tasset, just below the inner buckle of the left tasset, and just below and to the outside of the outer buckle of the left tasset are now plugged with externally-flush rivets. Secured by a round-headed rivet within the outer end of the sixth lame of each tasset is a single-ended, tongued, iron buckle with an elaborately filed rectangular loop and a rectangular hasp with cropped corners. The buckle at one time served to receive a strap riveted within the inner end of the same lame. A fragment of the modern strap is secured by a round-headed rivet with a circular internal washer. Part of the composite armour HEN.M.9A-K-1933 title: tassets NOTES ----- type: history note value: Mr James Stewart Henderson of 'Abbotsford', Downs Road, St Helen's Park, Hastings, Sussex LICENSING --------- text license status: CC0 image license status: CC-BY-NC-SA OWNERSHIP --------- instutition: The Fitzwilliam Museum department: Applied Arts collection: J.S. Henderson creditline: J.S. Henderson Bequest STABLE URL ---------- url: https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/17769 TECHNIQUES ---------- each formed of six upward-overlapping lames of which the sixth is considerably deeper than the rest and has a strongly convex lower edge; hammered, shaped, riveted, with incised decoration hammering TECHNIQUES ---------- patinating TECHNIQUES ---------- forming CATEGORIES ------ category: armour DATING ------ creation date: 1580 - 1580 creation date earliest: 1580 creation date latest: 1580 culture: 16th Century, Late CREATORS -------- maker: Unknown