This is from one of the Caeser tapestries in Bern.

Moderator: Glen K
Mac wrote:Tom B brought this document up in another thread. viewtopic.php?f=1&t=168360&start=35
It seems to me to be such an important document as to warrant its own thread. For convenience, I will take an excerpt from the version that Will McLean (Galleron) has on his blog. http://willscommonplacebook.blogspot.co ... johan.html I am mostly concerned with the arming of the combatants , and not the formalities of the duel, so I have not copied the whole thing.
It can also be found here. http://books.google.com/books?id=HqRsCy ... 56&f=false in Ffaulkes' Armourer and His Craft, as Appendix CTRAYTESE OF THE POYNTES OF WORSHIP IN ARMES BY JOHAN HYLL,
ARMORER SERGEANT IN THE KINGE’S ARMORY 1434
Bod. Lib., Ashmole. MS. 856, art. 22, pp. 376—~83
[376] Too my leve Lordes here nowe next folowinge is a Traytese compyled by Johan Hyll Armorier Sergeant in the office of Armory wt, Kinges Henry ye 4th and Henry ye 5th of ye poyntes of Worship in Armes and how he shall be diversely Armed & gouverned under supportacion of faveurof alle ye Needes to coverte adde & amenuse where nede is by the high comandement of the Princes that have powair so for to ordeyne & establishe
The first Honneur in Armes is a Gentilman to fight in his Souverain Lords quarell in a bataille of Treason sworne withinne Listes before his souverain Lorde whether he be Appellant or Defendant ye houneur is his that winneth ye feelde.
As for the appellant thus Armed by his owne witte or by his counsaille wch is assigned to him before Conestabie & Marchall ye wch Counsaille is ordeyned & bounden to teche hym alle maner of fightynge & soteltees of Armes that longeth for a battaile sworne
First hym nedeth to have a paire of hosen of corde wtoute vampeys And the saide hosen kutte at ye knees and lyned wtin wt Lynnen cloth byesse as the hose is A payre of shoen of red Lether thynne laced & fretted underneth wt whippecorde & persed, And above withinne Lyned wt Lynnen cloth three fyngers in brede double & byesse from the too an yncle above ye wriste. And so behinde at ye hele from the Soole halfe a quarter of a yearde uppe this is to fasten wele to his Sabatons And the same Sabatons fastened under ye soole of ye fote in 2 places hym nedeth also a petycote of an overbody of a doublett, his petycote wt oute sleves, ye syses of him 3 quarters aboute wt outen coler, And that other part noo ferther thanne [377] ye waste wt streyte sleves and coler and cutaine oylettes in ye sleves for ye vaunt bras and ye Rerebrase
Armed in this wise First behoveth Sabatouns grevis & cloos quysseux wt voydours of plate or of mayle & a cloos breche of mayle wt 5 bokles of stele ye tisseux of fyne lether. And all ye armyng poyntes after they ben knytte & fastened on hym armed that ye poyntes of him be kutte of
And thanne a paire of cloos gussetts strong sclave not drawes and thatye gussets be thre fingers withinne his plates at both assises And thanne a paire of plattes at xx li lib weight his breste & his plats enarmed to wt wyre or wt poyntes.
A pair of Rerebraces shitten withinne the plates before wt twi forlockes and behinde wt thre forlocks. A paire of vaunt bras cloos wt voydours of mayle & fretted. A pair of gloves of avantage wche may be devised. A basnet of avauntage for ye listes whiche is not goode for noon other battailles but man for man save that necessitie hath noo lawe, the basnet locked baver & vysour locked or charnelled also to ye brest & behynde wt two forlockes. And this Gentilman appellent aforesaide whanne he is thus armed & redy to come to ye felde do on hym a cote of armes of sengle tarten ye beter for avauntage in fighting. And his leg harneys covered alle wt reed taritryn the wche ben called tunictes for he coverynge of his leg harneys is doen because his adversarie shal not lightly espye his blode. And therefore also hen his hosen reed for in alle other colours blode wol lightly be seyne, for by the oolde tyme in such a bataile there shulde noo thing have be seyn here save his basnett & his gloves. And thanne tye on hym a payre of besagewes. Also it fitteth the [378] foresaide counsaille to goo to ye kyng the daye before ye bataille & aske his logging nigh ye listes. Also ye foresaide Counsaille must ordeyne hym the masses ye first masse of ye Trinitie ye seconde of ye Holy Goste & ye thirde of owre Ladye or elles of what other sainte or saintes that he hath devocion unto
I hope that folks will discuss likely ways to interpret the arming. Some of the passages are pretty straightforward, and others are difficult to understand.
Mac
I re-read the thread last night, but I don't thing I have any new ideas yet.Tom B. wrote:Any new thoughts about this now?
That certainly sounds good. I just did a search for vamp etymology, and Oxford dictionary online thinks this is the derivation as well.Sean M wrote:A document from Nottingham from 1395 accuses makers of hose of using inadequate cloth, and some of them temper old cloth with new cloth in the wamppeys, to the deception of the people. They think it comes from avantpié "fore-foot" so I guess it means the toe part of the hose..
Interesting to see that.Sean M wrote:The brigandine-makers of Angers also classified cuirasses by weight .
This! We are hanging on every letter of an old transcription. Some fresh eyes on the original might help.Sean M wrote:It would be good for someone in the UK to visit the Ashmolean and see if any of the hard words look different today than in 1840 or 1900. I don't know if they let people buy a scan ...
Marianne just checked online. They have not digitized "Bod. Lib., Ashmole. MS. 856". They have scanned numbers on either side, but not that one.Sean M wrote: It would be good for someone in the UK to visit the Ashmolean and see if any of the hard words look different today than in 1840 or 1900. I don't know if they let people buy a scan ...
We had earlier established that this probably meant hosen without feet, or stirrup hosen. I thought I might add to this by presenting a few examples of stirrup hosen in art. It seems like they were more common than we can ever know, since any time we see a man who's shoes cover his ankles, he might well be wearing hosen "wtoute vampeys".First hym nedeth to have a paire of hosen of corde wtoute vampeys
That's my assumption as well, but I don't have an idea for how it applies here.
Ok. Perhaps it should be read as "pierced". Do you suppose it's the shoes themselves which are pierced? I like that a bit better than pursed, but I still don't have a clear idea what's happening. Does this piercing have something to do with that bias tape. Might it be related to the rather confusing "and above within" thing.Sean M wrote: ↑Mon Nov 15, 2021 2:33 am Persed is a perfectly cromulent medieval spelling of pierced https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/middle-eng ... /MED32913/ I think pursed to persed is more of a stretch linguistically speaking but Middle English is not my specialty https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/middle-eng ... /MED35300/ Didn't Middle English have a long "u" like the vowel in "boot"? Like modern German?
Lydgate likes to talk about fretted mail too https://www.bookandsword.com/armour-in- ... troy-book/
One more idea. What if we imagine a strip of linen cloth three fingers broad which runs from the toe to an inch above the ankle, and another at the heel 1/8 yard (11 cm) up? That would reinforce the top of the shoe where it will take points for the sabatons, and maybe at the front where the "ankle voider" is attached and at the 'back where the "heel voider" is attached. The linen in front would just be "above" the foot. It would also avoid any seams in the lining where they could gall the wearer's feet. It would not be a full lining of the uppers, just a reinforcement to make them stiffer where the iron will be pulling on them.and above withinne, lyned with lynnen cloth, three fyngers in brede, double, and byesse, from the too, an ynche above the wriste; and so behynde at the hele from the soole, halfe a quarter of a yerde uppe, this is to fasten wele to his sabatouns. And the same sabatouns fastened under the soole of the fote in 2 places.
Payment to John Dossyne, the Kinges smythe, for pynnes of ireon, a anckar, forelockes, barres, armyng nailes, &c. p. 20. Payment to John Lockersmythe, for a payre of gemeus, latchis, hangynglocke, barres, &c. Payment to John Atwell for syngle bryge naile, and spikes. p. 21. Payment to Harry Dyke for boltes, forelockes, and kayes, a payre of gemeus, stone hengis, nailis, spikes, &c.
Here is another late 15th century Low Countries tapestry with points on the side of the hose below the skirt of the jacket. ( Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Accession Number 09.172 https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/463207)
So the painting by Ulrich the Younger with the scale helmet is probably from imaReal.Kunstwerk: Malerei-Holz ; Einrichtung sakral ; Flügelaltar-Sonntagsseite ; Apt Ulrich der Jüngere (1512-1520 nachweisbar) Dokumentation: 1517 ; 1517 ; Augsburg ; Deutschland ; Schwaben ; Staatsgalerie im Schaezlerpalais ; 5349-5351
Anmerkungen: Rehlingeraltar ; "Altdeutsche Gemälde" der Staatsgalerie Augsburg (Ausst.Kat.), Bd. 1, München 1988, S. 13-17