Skip to main content
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Pasguard (elbow reinforce)
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

Pasguard (elbow reinforce)

Artist (Germany, 1471–1532)
Artist (German, about 1470–1536)
Dateabout 1520
Mediumetched and blackened steel
Dimensions32.5 × 33 cm (12 13/16 × 13 in.), 3 lb 8 oz (weight)
ClassificationsArms and Armor
Credit LineThe John Woodman Higgins Armory Collection
Object number2014.1138.9
Description1 piece of steel, asymmetric, with large upper wing and smaller lower wing; between is lobe for elbow, pierced to accommodate a bolt for securing to the cowter. Etching around the external perimeter of the wings and the border between the wings and elbow-lobe.
Label TextSuits of armor were often made with interchangeable “pieces” of exchange that allowed the suit to function in different ways: for cavalry, infantry, tournaments, and so on. The pasguard attached to the elbow-piece of the armor for jousting: it provided extra protection, but added encumbrance that was undesirable in battle.ProvenanceEx-collection Princes Radziwill Bashford Dean Clarence H. Mackay (Roslyn, LI) Purchased by Museum on July 18, 1939 from Jacques Seligmann & C0. (NYC), agents for the estate of Clarence H. Mackay. Collection transfer from Higgins Armory, January 2014.
On View
On view
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Northern German
1555–1560
Conservation Status: After Treatment
Kolman Helmschmid
1525–1530
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Austrian
about 1530–1540, with restorations from 1800s
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Austrian
about 1530–1540, with restorations from 1800s
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Southern German
late 1400s
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Italian
about 1510
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Northern German
about 1560
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Southern German
about 1560
Conservation Status: After Treatment
Kolman Helmschmid
1520–1525
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Franz Großschedel
1560–1570