
WAKE - MEDIEVAL English Horse Harness Pendant. 13th/14th Century.
c. 1200 to c. 1400 England
Offered by Sanda Lipton
£675
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Rare and intriguing English medieval horse harness pendant. 13th/14th Century.
ENGLISH MEDIEVAL HORSE HARNESS PENDANTS
FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION.
Mainly 13th and 14th Century.
Coats of arms on copper alloy, with gold, silver and enamel depending on the colours of the arms – they depicted the allegiance of the rider. However, a small proportion were used for decorative purposes only to show status.
Pendants are found in a variety of shapes, usually attached to the harness by means of a separate hinged mount, which might be a horizontal bar with a downward projecting suspension loop, or sometimes a cruciform design. They were often attached to the peytrel – a strap girdling the front of the horse and sometimes also on the horse’s forehead, suspended from the upper bridle strap.
These pendants were at the peak of their use in the 13th and 14th century. The fashion faded away when arms became less simple and quartering was introduced.
Most families have been traced and many of them came over with William the Conqueror.
WAKE
ARMS: (Or) two bar and in chief two roundels
C. 1200 - 1400
Found Harwich 1999
Possibly connected to Hereward 'the Wake', Legendary leader of a resistance to William
the Conqueror in eastern England.
Lincolnshire family of note since C12th. Family includes Joan the Fair Maid of Kent who
eventually became the mother of the future Richard II.
In C14th Governor of the Channel Islands.
ENGLISH MEDIEVAL HORSE HARNESS PENDANTS
FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION.
Mainly 13th and 14th Century.
Coats of arms on copper alloy, with gold, silver and enamel depending on the colours of the arms – they depicted the allegiance of the rider. However, a small proportion were used for decorative purposes only to show status.
Pendants are found in a variety of shapes, usually attached to the harness by means of a separate hinged mount, which might be a horizontal bar with a downward projecting suspension loop, or sometimes a cruciform design. They were often attached to the peytrel – a strap girdling the front of the horse and sometimes also on the horse’s forehead, suspended from the upper bridle strap.
These pendants were at the peak of their use in the 13th and 14th century. The fashion faded away when arms became less simple and quartering was introduced.
Most families have been traced and many of them came over with William the Conqueror.
WAKE
ARMS: (Or) two bar and in chief two roundels
C. 1200 - 1400
Found Harwich 1999
Possibly connected to Hereward 'the Wake', Legendary leader of a resistance to William
the Conqueror in eastern England.
Lincolnshire family of note since C12th. Family includes Joan the Fair Maid of Kent who
eventually became the mother of the future Richard II.
In C14th Governor of the Channel Islands.
Condition: Very good and in keeping with it's age.
Stock Code
10
Sanda Lipton
Sanda Lipton
Suite 202
2 Lansdowne Row
London
W1J 6HL
England