Page:Horse shoes and horse shoeing.djvu/316

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HORSE-SHOES AND HORSE-SHOEING.

the horse is shod in the most unequivocal manner, each hoof exhibiting three nails.

fig. 111

In another (Plut. 2278), representing a group of Anglo-Saxon equestrians, all the horses are represented as shod, the shoes having calkins, and retained on the hoofs apparently by four nails on each side.

In the Cottonian collection is another manuscript (Nero C. 4), with a series of illustrations of the life of our Saviour, in which is a royal cavalcade, whose horses' feet are all protected with shoes; and also a picture of the flight into Egypt (fol. 7), where the mule or ass has its hoofs yet more distinctly armed. In the same volume is an