<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><objects xmlns="http://www.heritage-standards.org/midas/schema/1.0"
     xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
     xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.heritage-standards.org/midas/schema/1.0 http://www.heritage-standards.org/midas/schema/1.0/midas_object.xsd">
<object>
<recordmetadata>
<created>
<createdon>2012-02-10 16:56:19</createdon>
<createdby>
<appellation>
<name>Tom Brindle</name>
<identifier namespace="PAS">tbrindle</identifier></appellation>
</createdby>
</created>
<lastupdated>
<lastupdatedon>2012-02-10 17:24:00</lastupdatedon>
<lastupdatedby>
<appellation><name>Tom Brindle</name>
<identifier namespace="PAS">tbrindle</identifier>
</appellation>
</lastupdatedby>
</lastupdated>
</recordmetadata>
<appellation>
<identifier namespace="PAS">WMID-54C330</identifier>
</appellation>
<character>
<objecttype certainty="Certain">
MOUNT</objecttype>
<descriptions>
<description>
<full>An almost complete copper&#45;alloy medieval mount. The mount is shield shaped, with three straight sides and a convex side at the bottom. No clear means of attachment survive on the reverse although it may perhaps have been soldered to something. The mount measures 64.83 mm long, 49.85 mm wide, 2.35 mm thick and weighs 31.4 grams. It is slightly bent so that it appears convex when viewed from the side. A small section is missing from the lower right hand side of the mount.
A heraldic device is recognisable on the mount through moulded elements and through traces of red enamel and very fine traces of gilding. Where the enamel and gilding has deteriorated the mount has a dark brown pitted surface. The reverse also has a predominantly dark brown pitted surface.
Although largely missing enough enamel and gilding survives in order to be able to describe the device. It has a red (gules) enamelled field, with a gilded (or) border  (bordure) and a gilded band across the shield (fess), above and below  which are two sets of three gilded cross&#45;crosslet charges. The three  cross&#45;crosslets above the fess are in the dexter chief, middle chief and  sinister chief locations.  These are all the same size.  The three  cross&#45;crosslets below the fess are in the dexter base, middle base and  sinister base locations. These are also of approximately the same size.
The heraldic blazon for the mount is gules a fess between six cross crosslets or. This heraldic device is associated with the Beauchamp family, the Earls of Warwick (A. Wagner 1972, &#39;Historic Heraldry of Great Britain, pp. 57 &#45; 8 and Plate XI).
Two large mounts are included in &#39;Medieval Armorial Horse Furniture in  Norfolk&#39; (Ashley, 2002, p16, numbers 145 (fragment) and 146 (complete)).  Ashley suggests that the complete mount (number 146),  which has a rivet hole in the base of the shield,  may once have been  fixed to the saddle of a horse in a similar manner to that shown in a  mural of St. George, c.1450, in St Gregory&#39;s Church, Norwich.  He adds  that shields of this size could equally well have been part of some  other object, perhaps even a tomb or monument (citing Griffitths, &#39;Shield Shaped Mounts&#39;, 1989, 1&#45;2).  Ashley also comments that large  shield&#45;shaped mounts are also occasionally shown on monuments as being  attached to male and female attire and to the camail of knights (citing,  Armstrong, &#39;A note on four armorial pendants in the academy&#39;s  collection&#39;, 1912, p. 192).
In, &#39;The Medieval Horse and its Equipment&#39;, Clark (1995, p 62) states that  from perhaps the second half of the 13th century, heraldric designs  appear on pendants decorating horse&#45;harnesses, with coats of arms  depicted with coloured enamels, silvering, and gilding. There was a huge  increase in heraldry in this period, perhaps associated with the Welsh  and Scottish Wars of Edward I (1272&#45;1307) (ibid.).  By the end of the  14th century, pendants were in decline with fashions changing to  decorative leather or fabric trappings (Geoff Egan cited from pers. comm. associated with PAS record WMID&#45;1F4E67). It is likely that this mount can thereore be dated to the mid&#45;13th to the end of the 14th century.</full>
<summary>An almost complete copper&#45;alloy medieval mount. The mount is shield shaped, with three straight sides and a convex side at the bottom. No clear means of attachment survive on the reverse although it may perhaps have been soldered to something. The mount measures 64.83 mm long, 49.85 mm wide, 2.35...</summary>
<notes></notes>
</description>
</descriptions>
<manufacture>
<materials>
<material>Copper alloy</material>
</materials>
<technique>Cast</technique>
<temporal>
<span>
<display>
<appellation type="broadperiod">MEDIEVAL</appellation>
<appellation type="periodFrom">MEDIEVAL</appellation>
<appellation type="subperiodFrom"></appellation>
<appellation type="periodTo">ROMAN</appellation>
<appellation type="subperiodTo"></appellation>
</display>
<start><appellation type="date" qualifier="circa">1250</appellation></start>
<end><appellation type="date" qualifier="circa">1400</appellation></end>
</span>
</temporal>
</manufacture>
<measurements>
<measurement units="mm" type="width">49.85</measurement>
<measurement units="mm" type="diameter"></measurement>
<measurement units="mm" type="height"></measurement>
<measurement units="mm" type="length">64.83</measurement>
<measurement units="mm" type="thickness">2.35</measurement>
</measurements>
<decorations>
<decoration type="inscription"></decoration>
<decoration type="method"></decoration>
<decoration type="style"></decoration>
<decoration type="surface treatement"></decoration>
</decorations>
</character>
<condition>
<state>
Poor</state>
<completeness>
Incomplete</completeness>
</condition>
<activities>
<activity type="recording">
<temporal>
<span>
<start>
<appellation type="datetime">
2012-02-10 16:56:19</appellation>
</start>
</span>
</temporal>
</activity>
</activities>
<discovery>
<actor></actor>
<spatial>
<place>
<namedplace>
<location type="county" namespace="EH_CDP98">WARWICKSHIRE</location>
<location type="district">STRATFORD ON AVON</location>
<location type="parish">ULLENHALL</location>
</namedplace>
</place>
<gridref namespace='OSGB36'></gridref>
<geometry>
<spatialappellation>
<quickpoint>
<x></x>
<y></y>
</quickpoint>
<entity spatialtype="Point" uri="123" namespace="PAS Database">
<wkt srs="EPSG:27700">
POINT( )
</wkt>
</entity>
<capturemethod>
From Finder</capturemethod>
</spatialappellation>
</geometry>
<representations>
<representation namespace="O.S.1:10000">
 
</representation>
<representation namespace="O.S.1:25000">
 
</representation>
</representations>
</spatial>
<temporal>
<span>
<start>
<appellation type="date" qualifier="exactly">
29.06.2003
</appellation>
</start>
</span>
</temporal>
<method>Metal detector</method>
<circumstance></circumstance>
</discovery>
<quantity>1</quantity>
<rights>
<copyright>
<holder>WMID</holder> 
<statement>Creative Commons Non Commercial Share Alike - The Portable Antiquities Scheme</statement>
<year>2012</year>
</copyright>
<accessrights>
<grantedto></grantedto>
<conditions></conditions>
<statement></statement>
</accessrights>
<reproductionrights>
<statement>These records can be reproduced in a non commercial enviroment as long as the original recorder is cited.</statement>
<contact>The Portable Antiquities Scheme info@finds.org.uk</contact>
<fees>No fees are applicable.</fees>
</reproductionrights>
</rights>
<objectannex>
<ruler></ruler>
</objectannex>
</object></objects>
