IDENTIFIERS ----------- id: 17935 accession number: HEN.M.14K-1933 DATE AUDIT ---------- created: Saturday 6 August 2011 updated: Wednesday 14 September 2022 DESCRIPTIVE DATA ---------------- object type: Two cuisses and poleyns almost forming a pair, for light field use. Each formed of a gutter-shaped main plate, a modern upper extension plate and a winged poleyn of five lames. The main plate is boxed in three vertical panels separated by a medial and a lateral ridge. Its upper edge, which slopes up slightly to the outside, has a bold, plain, partial inward turn accompanied by a recessed border containing six modern round-headed lining-rivets. The innermost and outermost rivets are fitted with square or octagonal internal washers and now serve to attach the upper extension-plate within the upper edge of the main plate. The extension-plate is connected to the main plate medially by a modern internal leather secured to each element by a pair of round-headed rivets with square, octagonal or circular internal washers. In the case of the right cuisse, the inner of each pair of rivets has been omitted. The hole for that in the main plate is filled with a round-headed rivet that does not now engage the leather. The short upper extension-plate of each cuisse has a strongly convex upper edge that rises towards its outer end. The edge has a plain, partial inward turn accompanied by a recessed border containing seven modern lining-rivets, all of which are round-headed except for the outermost one of the right cuisse, which is flat-headed. The lower end of the main plate is decorated with a pair of markedly diverging, curved, shallow flutes. The cuisse is now fastened around the rear of the thigh by a modern buff-leather strap that is cut with slits at either end to button over modern rivets that project from near the upper end of each side of the main plate. The rivets have flat, radially-fluted heads. The holes that they occupied would originally have served to secure conventional straps and buckles. The outer edge of the main plate curves inwards to a rounded corner at its lower end. Attached to the lower edge of the main plate is a medially-ridged poleyn of five lames that overlap outwards from the third. The lames are connected to one another and to the cuisse at their outer ends by externally-flush rivets, some of which are replaced. Rivet-holes pierced in the lower edge of the main plate of the left cuisse, just to the inside of each of the present articulation-points, suggest that the poleyn now mounted with it is associated. The edges of all five lames of the poleyn are cusped medially. The edges of the first, second, fourth and fifth lames are also cusped at their articulation-points. The third lame is shaped to the point of the knee and has an oval, centrally-puckered wing that is obtusely pointed at its rear. The edge of the wing has a plain, partial inward turn accompanied by a recessed border, except at the pucker. The point of the knee is decorated with a vertical, elongated, almond-shaped rib. The rib of the left poleyn is decorated with file-roping. A similar, more slender horizontal rib, without roping, decorates the side of each poleyn just in front of the pucker of the wing. The rib of the right poleyn is slightly longer than that of the left poleyn. Located just behind the horizontal rib of each poleyn is an externally-flush rivet that would originally have served to attach a strap and buckle that engaged a strap riveted at the inner end of the same lame. The rivet for the inner strap is externally-flush in the case of the right poleyn, and round-headed in the case of the left poleyn. It is probable that each poleyn would originally have been extended downwards by a further plate that formed a short shin-defence. The holes for its attachment have been opened out to crudely-formed key-hole slots intended to receive the turning-pins of the greave associated with each cuisse and poleyn in modern times. Part of the composite armour HEN.M.14A-L-1933. title: cuisses 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/17935 TECHNIQUES ---------- each formed of a gutter-shaped main plate, a modern upper extension plate and a winged medially-ridged poleyn of five lames; hammered, shaped, riveted, with incised decoration, file-roped ribs and recessed borders hammering TECHNIQUES ---------- patinating TECHNIQUES ---------- forming CATEGORIES ------ category: armour DATING ------ creation date: 1510 - 1510 creation date earliest: 1510 creation date latest: 1510 culture: 16th Century, Early# CREATORS -------- maker: Unknown