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Anelace
Type of dagger from 14th century England
Type of dagger from 14th century England
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An anelace (or in Middle English anelas) was a medieval dagger worn as a gentleman's accoutrement in 14th century England.
Frederick William Fairholt (1846) describes it as "a knife or dagger worn at the girdle", and George Russell French (1869) as "a large dagger, or a short sword, [that] appears to have been worn, suspended by a ring from the girdle, almost exclusively by civilians".
Anelaces had a broad blade "sharp on both edges, and became narrower from hilt to point". The term is attested from 1250 to 1300 in the Middle English form of an(e)las, which is derived from the Old French ale(s)naz, a derivative of alesne (awl), itself derived from the Old High German alasna.
French mentions numerous examples of anelaces appearing in 14th century English art. They were also mentioned in literature. In Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, a franklin (a landowner) wears "an anelace and a gipciere [pouch] all of silk / Hung at his girdle, white as morwe milk", and in an undated English translation of the poem of Partonopeus de Blois, King Sornegur wears "an anelas sharp-pointed".
References
References
- (1846). "Costume in England: A History of Dress from the Earliest Period Till the Close of the Eighteenth Century: To which is Appended an Illustrated Glossary of Terms for All Articles of Use Or Ornament Worn about the Person". Chapman and Hall.
- French, George Russell. (1869). "A Catalogue of the Antiquities and Works of Art, Volume 1". Harrison and sons.
- (1870). "Weapons of War: Being a History of Arms and Armour from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Part 1". Bell & Daldy.
- "Anelace".
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