Paweł Ossoliński Fotografia
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Paweł Ossoliński Fotografia
Horse Armor from Tibet, c.1450-1650 CE: this piece of armor was created to protect a horse's head and face
This type of armor is known as a shaffron (or chamfron) and it was supposed to cover a horse's face from its forehead down to its muzzle.
The armor was created in Tibet or Mongolia about 400-600 years ago; it was made by grafting small iron plates, gold and silver damascened elements, and copper onto a leather/cotton base.
As the Metropolitan Museum of Art describes:
Tibetan shaffrons are relatively rare. This shaffron is by far the most elaborately decorated of any known example. The quality and execution of its lavish gold and silver damascening rank among the best examples of Tibetan decorated ironwork of this kind, suggesting that it was made for a very high ranking general, if not a king.
A few other shaffrons from the same culture/period are also known to exist:
Above: a similar shaffron from Tibet or Mongolia, c.1400-1650 CE, without the elaborate gold and silver decoration
Above: a frontal plate from a Tibetan shaffron, c.1500-1700 CE
Above: another shaffron from Tibet or Mongolia, c.1500-1650 CE
Sources & More Info:
Metropolitan Museum of Art: Shaffron (Horse's Head Defense)
Met Publications: Warriors of the Himalayas: the Arms and Armor of Tibet
Arms and Armour: History, Conservation, and Analysis: The Remains of a Rare Tibetan Shaffron
Metropolitan Museum of Art: Another Shaffron from Tibet or Mongolia
Metropolitan Museum of Art: Frontal Plate of a Tibetan Shaffron
Metropolitan Museum of Art: Shaffron from Tibet or Mongolia
Roman Cavalry Chamfron, Vindolanda Roman Fort, Hadrian's Wall, Northumberland
So I’ve got another historical chamfron commission, and I was doing some research on the era and I just found THIS THING --
Jaw dropped.
It’s not the one I’ve been commissioned to make, but holy hell what a feather that would be in my cap. I even have a stamp that would be perfect for doing those scales:
Nnnngh I want to work it~~~
I want to work on it RIGHT NOW. 🤣🤣
Sigh. Stay on task.
Though in fairness, the thing I’m actually being paid to do is also quite lovely:
Indo-Persian chamfron. 19th century.
anja_from_unia
Paweł Ossoliński Fotografia
Replica Roman Cavalry Chamfron, Trimontium Museum, Melrose