Latten

The term latten referred loosely to the copper alloys such as brass or bronze that appeared in the Middle Ages and through to the late 18th and early 19th centuries. It was used for monumental brasses, in decorative effects on borders, rivets or other details of metalwork (particularly armour), in livery and pilgrim badges or funerary effigies.[1] Latten commonly contained varying amounts of copper, tin, zinc and lead, giving it characteristics of both brass and bronze.[2] Metalworkers commonly formed latten in thin sheets and used it to make church utensils. Brass of this period is made through the calamine brass process, from copper and zinc ore. (Later brass was made with zinc metal from Champion's smelting process and is not generally referred to as latten.) This calamine brass was generally manufactured as hammered sheet or "battery brass" (hammered by a "battery" of water-powered trip hammers) and cast brass was rare.[3]

"Latten" also refers to a type of tin plating on iron (or possibly some other base metal), which is known as white latten; and black latten refers to laten-brass, which is brass milled into thin plates or sheets.[4]

The term "latten" has also been used, rarely, to refer to lead alloys.

In general, metal in thin sheets is said to be latten such as gold latten; and lattens (plural) refers to metal sheets between 1/64" and 1/32" in thickness.

Footnotes

    gollark: So, looks like the copper is incuhatchable, but I'm hatchling locked for another hour until F Octothorpe grows.
    gollark: We must create a keyboard cat simulation.
    gollark: They do hatch, but veeeeery slowly, and then they get sick.
    gollark: Ah, zyus, bane of people who want eggs which hatch.
    gollark: My copper is incuhatchable, unless I already incubated it and forgot.

    References

    • Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (1998, 2nd edition)
    • The Oxford English Dictionary (1989, 2nd edition)
    • Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1986)
    1. Curl, James Stevens; Wilson, Susan (2016). Oxford Dictionary of Architecture. Oxford University Pres. p. 429. ISBN 978-0-19-967499-2.
    2. Brownsword, Roger (2003). Blair, John; Blair, W. John; Ramsay, Nigel (eds.). English Medieval Industries: Craftsmen, Techniques, Products. Hambledon & London. pp. 103–104. ISBN 978-0907628873.
    3. Edge, David; Paddock, John Miles (1996) [1988]. Arms and Armour of the Medieval Knight. London: Saturn Books. ISBN 1862220018.
    4. Day, Joan (1973). Bristol Brass. David & Charles. ISBN 0715360655.
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