A Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor: in All Countries and in All TimesCourier Corporation, 13.03.2013 - 704 Seiten Widely considered the classic book in the field, George Cameron Stone's A Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor in All Countries and in All Times is an indispensable resource and reference tool for anyone interested in arms and armor. Originally published in 1934, it remains an essential guide to the field. To describe the worldwide range and variety of weaponry, Stone drew upon the more than 4,000 items in his private collection of Eastern arms and armor, as well as the European arms collection of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, and a variety of other sources. Since the author subsequently bequeathed his entire collection to the Metropolitan Museum, this volume serves as an abbreviated visual reference to that institution's Arms and Armor collection. By profession a metallurgist, the author focused on techniques of manufacture and workmanship to derive his method of codifying the typology of weapons, relying on an alphabetized dictionary format to avoid the confusions he found in a field without standardized nomenclature. This "glossary" format makes it easy for anyone to locate material on the astonishing variety of weapons covered. These include arquebuses, blunderbusses, flintlocks, wheel locks, matchlocks, and other antique guns; German armor; French rapiers; Roman short swords; Turkish crossbows; all the Japanese bladed weapons (katana, wakizashi, naginata, etc.); the East Asian kris in its countless permutations; and many more. Illustrated with 875 detailed figures, incorporating thousands of individual photographs and drawings, the book was written from the unique viewpoint of an expert who devoted a lifetime to the field. Hard to locate today (original editions are worth hundreds of dollars), Stone's Glossary represents a peerless resource for scholars, experts, collectors, students, hobbyists, and institutions — any student of the long history and development of weapons and armor around the world. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 57
Seite
... Tibet , China , Korea , Japan , Southeast Asia , Indonesia , Australia , the Pacific Islands , and the Americas . By the 1930s , Stone's house at 49 West 11th Street in New York contained an armory of nearly 5,000 items . This deep and ...
... Tibet , China , Korea , Japan , Southeast Asia , Indonesia , Australia , the Pacific Islands , and the Americas . By the 1930s , Stone's house at 49 West 11th Street in New York contained an armory of nearly 5,000 items . This deep and ...
Seite 7
... Tibetan scabbard set with coral , turquoise and shell . AMERA . A kind of spear thrower used by the Arunta , Luritja , Urmatjera and Kaitish tribes of Australia . It consists of a broad lanceolate blade of mulga wood ( Acacia Aneura ) ...
... Tibetan scabbard set with coral , turquoise and shell . AMERA . A kind of spear thrower used by the Arunta , Luritja , Urmatjera and Kaitish tribes of Australia . It consists of a broad lanceolate blade of mulga wood ( Acacia Aneura ) ...
Seite 51
... Tibetan Armor . Helmet of eight overlapping plates and a knob on the top , all laced together with strips of leather . The neck guard and body armor are made of small iron scales laced together ; the bottom of the skirt is formed of ...
... Tibetan Armor . Helmet of eight overlapping plates and a knob on the top , all laced together with strips of leather . The neck guard and body armor are made of small iron scales laced together ; the bottom of the skirt is formed of ...
Seite 52
... body armor was probably made mainly of leather . There are two complete suits of Tibetan horse armor in the India Museum , South Kensington , fig . 125 , that show a mixture of Indian and Chinese forms . They prob- ably.
... body armor was probably made mainly of leather . There are two complete suits of Tibetan horse armor in the India Museum , South Kensington , fig . 125 , that show a mixture of Indian and Chinese forms . They prob- ably.
Seite 53
... Tibetan armor of which we have any account was called " willow leaf " because it was made of long narrow scales laced together . It may , or may not , be the same as the suit shown in and very heavy . Arm guards of leather strapped with ...
... Tibetan armor of which we have any account was called " willow leaf " because it was made of long narrow scales laced together . It may , or may not , be the same as the suit shown in and very heavy . Arm guards of leather strapped with ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor in All ... George Cameron Stone Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1999 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
16th century arrow bamboo bands barbed barrel blade brass brigandine Burgonet Burton Sword butt called carried carved Castle Chinese club Conder cord crossbow curved decorated Dyak edge Egerton embossed engraved fastened feet long ffoulkes FIGURE flat flintlock front Garbutt gauntlet German gilded grooves habaki handle head heavy Hewitt hilt Hilt and scabbard horn inches long India inlaid with gold inlaid with silver iron Italian ivory Japan Japanese Japanese blade Japanese helmet Joly katana katar knife kozuka kris lacquer lance later leather Length lock loop matchlock metal Metropolitan Museum Miquelet mountings neck guard ornaments Persian piece pierced pistol Planche plates pommel protect Queensland quillons relief ring riveted round Sashimono scabbard Scabbard covered scale shaft shakudo Shamshir shape Shibuichi shield side sometimes steel stone straight straps tachi Tibet tsuba Turkish usually wakizashi weapon wooden worn