3o8 



HORSE-SHOES AND HORSE-SHOEING. 



fig. ii8 



The instrument found at Chateau Beauregard, Hautes- 



Pyrenees, and now in 

 the ^Cluny Museum, 

 "belongs to the lirst 

 class (figs. 1 1 8, 119), 

 and is shown here in 

 profile, as well as upper 

 face. One of those 

 discovered at Vieil- 

 Evreux is also figured 

 (fig. 120), and agrees 

 with fig. 1 1 5 found at 

 Dalheim. Of a more 

 peculiar shape, but yet 

 evidently intended for 

 the same purpose, are 

 two of the number 

 recovered at Remen- 

 necourt, and delineat- 



fig. 119 



ed by M. de Widrange, an antiquarian of Bar-le-Duc 

 (figs. 121, 122). Figure 121 is remarkable for its pos- 

 sessing no rings or ears, or anything by which it could 

 be attached to the hoof, supposing it to have been in- 



