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Under the Cuisse

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 3:17 pm
by jonititan
Hello AA!

I'm currently making a cuisse to go with some articulated knees that a friend gave to me.

I have a pourpoint that the legs will point onto.
But I was hoping to make some sort of gambeson/cloth thing to point the leg pieces to.
That I could in turn point to the pourpoint.
Could anyone point me towards a pattern for this?

Cheers!

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 3:28 pm
by dacovalu
What about padded cuisses?
I have no idea if historicly there was any padding beneath leg harnesses.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:13 pm
by jonititan
I must admit I'm starting from the assumption that this is the case.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:19 pm
by chef de chambre
Incorrect assumption. The closest thing to any padding, under complete plate articulated legs, is the 'bulwarks' around the knees, which is merely a piece of blanket, wrapped as a towel, and held in place by the poleyn strap.

Plate armour does not need padding under it if it is made right, 'gambesons' were not worn under plate armour, descriptions of arming doublets generally have no padding mentioned, save at the shoulder on examples for the mounted melee.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:29 pm
by jonititan
Righto.

Well would there be some sort of hose that the armour is pointed to?

Thats more what i'm interested in.

Getting it fitting right.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:30 pm
by dacovalu
depending on the era, the cuisses are pointed to the arming doublet, earlier than that im not sure about.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:37 pm
by jonititan
when i say cuisse I mean the plate on the thigh
I'm hoping to be able to point all the leg armour to a base garment.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:46 pm
by chef de chambre
jonititan wrote:when i say cuisse I mean the plate on the thigh
I'm hoping to be able to point all the leg armour to a base garment.


Yes, we understand what a cuisse is.

There is little to no indication of them pointing to hosen at all, they would seem to have been suspended from the bottom edge of the arming doublet, and in point of fact, are largely supported by a properly cased greave itself with a turning pin/pin passing through the lowest lame of the cuisse under the poleyn - they tie to the arming doublet (by leathers provided at the top of the cuisse, and indicated on extant examples by a line of rivets across the top), which should be closely fitted, corsett like at the natural waist, is to help relieve and distribute some of the weight of them across the hips.

While arming hose is mentioned in some documents, there is zero mention of arming points on them, they are mentioned to be of a tough material, likely to reduce damage from abrasion of the harness. Again, they are not padded, the only padding on the leg being mentioned as 'bulwarkes' of blanket at the knee.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:59 pm
by mordreth
This is a simple knee cop rather than an articulated piece, but the harness had mail, gamboised cuisses, and a plate cuisse, I believe the harness was dated to @ 1350

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:59 pm
by jonititan
Apologies

No I was not suggesting you or anyone else misunderstood the meaning.
I was trying to portray that I was possibly using the wrong term.

I had assumed that the armour would be supported from points since that was the way most of the arm harness's I have seen are supported.
The previous leg harness I previously used was indeed hung from the belt and later the pourpoint.

This led to quite high stress in this linkage.
I had presumed this was because I was doing it wrong in some way.
When it was loose the cop slid off my knee and when tight it either snapped or caused everything to rise up.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 7:20 pm
by chef de chambre
No worries.

More than one point is normally used on the cuisses leather. Late 14th-15th century cuisse would normally have cased greaves, very closely fitting to the calf, with a pin either centrally on the greave, or offest to the outside, which passed through the lowest lame of the cuisse under the knee. In Italian harness, there is usually a stap on this lame also, that passes through a staple on the rear of the greave, the whole arrangement supports all the parts of it.

Basically, most peoples European 'late period' leg harness issues are solved by properly fitted cased greaves, with pin or turning pin, locking the cuisse and greaves together as a unit in some fashion, and additionally supported by the arming doublet which they were pointed to.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 9:23 pm
by Otto von Teich
chef de chambre wrote:Incorrect assumption. The closest thing to any padding, under complete plate articulated legs, is the 'bulwarks' around the knees, which is merely a piece of blanket, wrapped as a towel, and held in place by the poleyn strap.

Plate armour does not need padding under it if it is made right, 'gambesons' were not worn under plate armour, descriptions of arming doublets generally have no padding mentioned, save at the shoulder on examples for the mounted melee.
Some German cuisses from the late 15th century have thin linen liners. For whatever thats worth...not really padding per say.

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2009 10:22 pm
by Konstantin the Red
Something to keep the hose from getting chafed?

Posted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 6:36 am
by Otto von Teich
Konstantin, I believe that was the purpose.

Posted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 12:55 pm
by jonititan
Is there a good link for doing greaves properly?

I have some old greaves i could repurpose.

Posted: Mon Nov 30, 2009 10:03 pm
by Konstantin the Red
Some of the best info on building closed greaves more historically that you could find is in TOMAR, Chapt. 34 Defending the Leg, pp. 467-72 et al. For any armor builder, this book is a must-read. Fitted, closed greaves help carry the weight of the rest of the leg armor, bearing this on the bulge of the calf and perhaps a little on the upper instep.

This led to quite high stress in this linkage.
I had presumed this was because I was doing it wrong in some way.
When it was loose the cop slid off my knee and when tight it either snapped or caused everything to rise up.


The cop slid off vertically, not flopping to one side or the other? This sounds like your main supporting point may not have been located where the length from beltline to knee would not vary -- along the trouser outseam, depending to the great trochanter of the hip. A lace or strap at the front of the hip will go very slack as the leg moves forward in a step or the knee comes up as you crouch. A lace or strap located behind the outseam location would be tightened a great deal with that leg motion; opposite side, opposite effect.

Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 7:55 am
by jonititan
I'll look up the TOMAR book(is this an abbreviation?)

What is the trochanter of the hip?
Do you mean the point of the hip bone?
I will look it up.