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Dressing in Steel: Part One (00:37:39) 934 views
Dressing in Steel: Part Two (00:20:04) 403 views
A Visit to the Armor Galleries (00:30:21) 4940 views
Bashford Dean and the Creation of the Arms and Armor Department, 1904–1929 (00:30:12) 256 views
The Art of Arms and Armor: Challenges of Research, Display, and Education (00:33:09) 331 views
Curators, Collectors, and Dealers: The Growth of the Arms and Armor Collection, 1929 to the Present (00:36:37) 227 views
Shield Boss
Smallsword
Shield Grip
Chapel-de-Fer
Sword Pommel with the Arms of Pierre de Dreux (ca. 1190–1250), Duke of Brittany and Earl of Richmond
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This artwork is currently on display in Gallery 380
This rare type of bit is described in a sixteenth-century treatise as "a defense in time of war so that the enemy cannot grab onto it with his hand." Grabbing the bit, or pulling it out of the mouth of an opponent’s horse, would make it difficult or impossible for a rider to control his horse in the press of battle, potentially leading to his defeat or death.
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