Composed Armor

Right pauldron (shoulder defense) marked by Matthes Deutsch German

Not on view

This armor was composed from pieces of several different armors and completed with restorations between about 1920 and 1928. Both arm defenses, the right gauntlet, and the genuine parts of the left thigh defense come from a large find of medieval armor discovered in 1840 in the ruins of the fortress of Chalcis, on the Greek island of Euboea (then a Venetian colony called Negroponte). The fortress had been captured and destroyed by the Turks in 1470. Now divided largely between the Ethnological Museum, Athens, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Chalcis hoard contains many rare and unusual elements of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century armor. Of particular importance are the variety of headpieces and the many fragments of brigandines (armor for the torso constructed of small plates riveted to layers of fabric), some of which retain portions of their original velvet covering. The Chalcis armor provides a unique picture of the armament used in the Aegean, one of the easternmost military outposts of the Venetian empire.

Composed Armor, Right pauldron (shoulder defense) marked by Matthes Deutsch (German, Landshut, documented 1485–1505), Steel, iron, copper alloy (latten), leather, brass, European, Italian and German

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