- Hotel of chamber of accounts
Hotel of the Chamber of Accounts in the Courtyard of the Palace in Paris. From a Woodcut of the "Cosmographie Universelle" of Munster, in folio: Basle, 1552. Thanks to the peace concluded with Flanders, on which occasion that country paid into the hands of the sovereign thirty thousand florins in gold for arrears of taxes, and, above all, owing to the rules of economy and order, from which Philip V., surnamed the Long, never deviated, the attitude of France became completely altered. We find the King initiating reform by reducing the expenses of his household. He convened round his person a great council, which met monthly to examine and discuss matters of public interest; he allowed only one national treasury for the reception of the State revenues; he required the treasurers to make a half-yearly statement of their accounts, and a daily journal of receipts and disbursements; he forbad clerks of the treasury to make entries either of receipts or expenditure, however trifling, without the authority and supervision of accountants, whom he also compelled to assist at the checking of sums received or paid by the money-changers. - Hotel de ville
The House of Jacques Coeur at Bourges, now converted into the Hôtel de Ville. - Great Châtelet
In 1032, a new magistrate was created, called the Provost of Paris, whose duty it was to give assistance to the bourgeois in arresting persons for debt. This functionary combined in his own person the financial and political chief of the capital, he was also the head of the nobility of the county, he was independent of the governor, and was placed above the bailiffs and seneschals. He was the senior of the urban magistracy and police, leader of the municipal troops, and, in a word, the prefect (præfectus urbis), as he was called under the Emperor Aurelian, or the first magistrate of Lutetia, as he was still called under Clotaire in 663. Assessors were associated with the provost, and together they formed a tribunal, which was afterwards known as the Châtelet, because they assembled in that fortress, the building of which is attributed to Julius Caesar. The Great Châtelet of Paris.--Principal Front opposite the Pont-au-Change.--Fac-simile of an Engraving on Copper by Mérian, in the "Topographia Galliae" of Zeller. - Castle Tower
- Feudal Castle of Chateau-Gaillard aux Andelys
Feudal Castle Present State of the Feudal Castle of Chateau-Gaillard aux Andelys, which was considered one of the strongest Castles of France in the Middle Ages, and was rebuilt in the Twelfth Century by Richard Coeur de Lion - Comb
Comb, Italian (14th Century) - Civic Guard of Ghent (Brotherhood of St. Sebastian)
- Church of St. Vital, at Ravenna. Byzantine style
- Cuirass
- From the 'Armourers Album'
- Knight arming
- Brass of Sir John de Creke
- Sixteenth-century Suit of Plate
- Horse Armour, sixteenth century
- Cuissard for the off hock
- Harnischmeister Albrecht, 1480
- Saint George
- The Westminster Helm
- The Brocas Helm
- The Barendyne Helm
- The Fogge Helm
- The Workshop of Conrad Seusenhofer
- Arming a knight for combat in the lists
- Coif of Mail
- From Romance of Alexander, Bib. Nat., Paris, circ. 1240
- Brass of an unknown knight
- Padded 'harnische-kappe' and helm showing the attachment of the cap, after Dürer
- Sallad with cover