
Cleveland Museum of Art
Pricked Spur
- Date
- 1200s
- Medium
- steel
- Culture
- Spain
- Department
- Medieval Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
The spur was an essential part of the knight's equipment. Fastened to his heels by means of straps and buckles, it was used to prod a horse into action. This example represents the oldest type recorded, the "pricked" spur, so-called because its neck terminated in a spike. The pricked spur was replaced during the Middle Ages by the "rowel" spur, with a rotating spiked wheel. Before they were made of metal, the earliest spurs were probably thorns that were attached to the back of the heel.
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