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chape
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{{For|the football club|Associação Chapecoense de Futebol}}(File:Sword parts numbered.svg|thumb|The scabbard "chape" is labelled 10.)File:St Ninian's Isle TreasureDSCF6212.jpg|thumb|Scabbard chape from the St Ninian's Isle TreasureSt Ninian's Isle TreasureFile:Thorsberg Ortband.png|thumb|300px|Illustration of the Thorsberg chapeThorsberg chapeChape has had various meanings in English, but the predominant one is a protective fitting at the bottom of a scabbard or sheath for a sword or dagger (10 in the diagram).OED "Chape", 2. "Chape", 1, described as obsolete, is "A plate of metal with which anything is covered, overlaid or ornamented." Historic blade weapons often had leather scabbards with metal fittings at either end, sometimes decorated.Oakeshott, pp. 239–245; Kavar, pp. 265–271 These are generally either in some sort of U shape, protecting the edges only, or a pocket shape covering the sides of the scabbard as well. The reinforced end of a single-piece metal scabbard can also be called the chape.The scabbard chape is not to be confused with the chappe, a French term - rain-guard in English - on the sword itself, a fitting at the top of the blade in late medieval weapons, just below the crossguard of the hilt. The chappe fitted outside the scabbard, presumably helping to hold the sword snugly and preventing rain coming in (4 in the diagram). This would typically have been of leather, though everything about these is uncertain as no original examples have survived, and they are mainly known from art.

Etymology

The word derives from the Latin "cappa", meaning hood or cape,OED "Chape" or tip or head.

Archaeology

With the "locket" or "throat" fitting at the top, open, end of the scabbard (9 in the diagram; confusingly, in French this is a chappe), the chape is often the only part of a scabbard to survive in the ground for archaeologists to find. Notable scabbard chapes include the Germanic Thorsberg chape, with an inscription in runes, from about 200 AD.The inscription has been given the Rundata (Scandinavian Runic-text Data Base) inventory designation DR 7. A striking silver chape terminating in the heads of animals or monsters from the St Ninian's Isle Treasure is now in the Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. This might be Anglo-Saxon or Scottish or Pictish, and dates to about 800 AD.Webster, pp 144–145, though Youngs describes the same items as "Pictish". Perhaps the most interesting period for chapes is Celtic art, where a variety of shapes and ornament were used.Kavar, pp. 265–271

Buckle chape

File:Chape et boucle ceinture Lastours.jpg|thumb|A bucklebuckleA buckle chape is the plate or fitting connecting some buckles to their belt or strap.OED "Chape", 4.

Notes

{{Reflist|30em}}

References

  • Kavar, Boris and Martina B., in Celtic Art in Europe: Making Connections, Eds, Christopher Gosden, Sally Crawford, Katharina Ulmschneider, pp. 265–271, 2014, Oxbow Books, {{ISBN|978-1-78297-658-5}}, Google Books
  • Oakeshott, R. Ewart, The Archaeology of Weapons: Arms and Armor from Prehistory to the Age of Chivalry, Dover Military History, Weapons, Armor Series, 1960, Courier Corporation, {{ISBN|978-0-486-29288-5}}
  • Youngs, Susan (ed), "The Work of Angels", Masterpieces of Celtic Metalwork, 6th–9th centuries AD, pp. 108–112, 1989, British Museum Press, London, {{ISBN|978-0-7141-0554-3}}
  • Webster, Leslie, Anglo-Saxon Art, 2012, British Museum Press, {{ISBN|978-0-7141-2809-2}}

External links

  • EB1911, Chape, 5, x,


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