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This table identifies various pieces of body armour worn from the medieval to early modern period in the Western world, mostly plate but some mail armour, arranged by the part of body that is protected and roughly by date. It does not identify fastening components or various appendages such as lance rests or plumeholders, or clothing such as tabards or surcoats, which were often worn over a harness. The slot in the helmet is called an occularium.
There are a variety of alternative names and spellings (such as cowter/couter or bassinet/bascinet/basinet or besagew/besague) which often reflect a word introduced from the French. Generally, the English spelling has been preferred (including mail instead of the lately used maille or the inauthentic term chainmail). The part of armour on the hand is called the gauntlet, which is based on a French word.
Name | Example | Period (Century) | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Head | |||
Mail coif | 400BC? to 15th | Mail hood, often worn with a hauberk. Sometimes made integrally with the hauberk, sometimes a separate piece. | |
Spangenhelm | 4th to 11th | A metal (usually iron) frame with plates (metal, leather or horn) riveted to the inside; some had hinged or laced cheekguards. Standard helm from late antiquity through the early Middle Ages. | |
Nasal helmet | Late 9th to 13th | The nasal helmet was characterised by the possession of a nose-guard, or 'nasal', composed of a single strip of metal that extended down from the skull or browband over the nose to provide facial protection. The helmet appeared throughout Western Europe late in the 9th century, and became the predominant form of head protection till the enclosed helmet and great helm were introduced in the 12th and early 13th century. | |
Enclosed helmet | Late 12th to early 13th | Primitive great helm or early great helm, forerunner of the great helm. The enclosed helmet covered the entire head, with full protection for the face and somewhat deeper coverage for the sides and back of the head than that found on previous types of helmets. It was developed near the end of 12th century and was largely superseded by the true great helm by c. 1240. | |
Great helm | Late 12th to 14th | Started as a simple cylinder with a flat top but later developed a curved "sugar loaf" pointed top to deflect crushing blows. Has small slits for eyes and breathing/ventilation which may be decorative as well as functional. Often removed after the initial "clash of lances" as it impedes sight and breathing and is very hot. Often worn with another helm underneath. A stereotypical knight's helm from the crusader period. | |
Cervelliere | Late 12th | Steel skull cap worn as a helm or underneath a great helm. Sometimes worn under rather than over the coif. | |
Bassinet | Early 14th to early/mid 15th | Originally worn underneath a great helm and had no visor but did develop "nasals" to protect the nose. By the mid-14th century it replaced the great helm and was fully visored, often "dog faced" (the conical hounskull visor), often worn without a visor for visibility and 'breathability'. Worn with an aventail then later with a gorget. Visors on English bassinets have a hinge at each side whereas German bassinets have a single hinge attached at the middle. | |
Sallet | Mid-15th | When worn with a bevor as was usual outside Italy, a sallet covers the entire head. The Italian version was a curvaceous helmet with a short tail, and was sometimes provided with a 'bellows visor'. The German sallet was distinguished by a long, sometimes laminated, tail that extended to cover the back of the neck and by a single, long eye-slit. It had no ventilation holes as there was a gap where the helm and bevor meet. The sallets of England, the Netherlands and France were intermediate between the Italian and German forms, with a short tail. A favoured helm in England and Western Europe, including Germanic areas (the tail may have influenced design of German helmets in World War II). | |
Barbute | 15th | Close fitting helmet with a characteristic Y- or T-shaped slit for vision and breathing, reminiscent of ancient Greek helmets | |
Armet | 15th | A bowl helmet that encloses the entire head with the use of hinged cheek plates that fold backwards. A gorget was attached and a comb may be present. May also have a rondel at the rear. Later armets have a visor. A stereotypical knight's helm. Favoured in Italy. | |
Close helmet or close helm | 15th to 16th century | A bowl helmet with a moveable visor, very similar visually to an armet and often the two are confused. However, it lacks the hinged cheekplates of an armet and instead has a movable bevor, hinged in common with the visor. | |
Burgonet | Early 16th | Open face bowl shaped helmet with a neck collar, a peak, a very characteristic comb, sometimes with cheek pieces. Sometimes has a buffe (a visor that is lowered, rather than raised). | |
Neck | |||
Aventail or camail | Detachable mail hung from a helmet to protect the neck and shoulders, often worn with bassinets. | ||
Bevor | Worn with a sallet to cover the jaw and throat (extending somewhat down the sternum). May also cover the back of the neck if worn with a bassinet rather than a sallet. May be solid or made of lames. Sometimes worn with a gorget. The Gauntlet is the glove armour on the hand it is based of a french word. | ||
Gorget | Steel collar to protect the neck and cover the neck opening in a complete cuirass. Quite unlike a modern shirt collar in that as well as covering the front and back of the neck it also covers part of the clavicles and sternum and a like area on the back. | ||
Standard, pixane, or bishop's mantle | A mail or leather collar. In common with a gorget, it is not like a modern shirt collar. Rather, it is a circle with a hole for the neck to fit through. It covers the shoulders, breast and upper back, perhaps like an extremely small poncho. | ||
Torso | |||
Brigandine | late 12th to 16th | Cloth garment, generally canvas or leather, lined with small oblong steel plates riveted to the fabric. | |
Hauberk, byrnie, or haubergeon | ? to 15th (mostly died out during the 14th and 15th centuries) | Mail shirt reaching to the mid-thigh with sleeves. Early mail shirts generally were quite long. During the 14th–15th century hauberks became shorter, coming down to the thigh. A haubergeon reaches the knee. The haubergeon was replaced by the hauberk due to the use of plate; with the legs now encased in steel, the longer mail became redundant. | |
Cuirass | 14th to 17th | Covers the chest, not the back, but the name is sometimes used to describe the chest and back plates together. Developed in antiquity but became common in the 14th century with the reintroduction of plate armour, later sometimes two pieces overlapping for top and bottom. Whether of one piece or two, breastplate is sometimes used to literally describe the section that covers the breast. | |
Plackart | Extra layer of plate armour initially covering the belly. Often decorated. Worn as part of a cuirass. | ||
Faulds | Bands to protect the front waist and hips, attached to cuirass. | ||
Culet | Small, horizontal lames that protect the small of the back or the buttocks, attached to a backplate or cuirass. | ||
Arm | |||
Couter or cowter | Plate that guards the elbow. Eventually became articulated. May be covered by guard of vambrace (see below). | ||
Spaulder | Bands of plate that cover the shoulder and part of upper arm but not the armpit. | ||
Pauldron | 15th | Covers the shoulder (with a dome shaped piece called a shoulder cop), armpit and sometimes the back and chest. | |
Gardbrace | Extra plate that covers the front of the shoulder and the armpit, worn over top of a pauldron. | ||
Rerebrace or brassart or upper cannon (of vambrace) | Plate that covers the section of upper arm from elbow to area covered by shoulder armour. | ||
Besagew | Circular plate that covers the armpit, typically worn with spaulders. See also rondel. | ||
Vambrace or lower cannon (of vambrace) | 14th | Forearm guard. May be solid metal or splints of metal attached to a leather backing. Bracers made of leather were most commonly worn by archers to protect against snapping bowstrings. Developed in antiquity but named in the 14th century. 'Vambrace' may also sometimes refer to parts of armour that together cover the lower and upper arms. | |
Gauntlet | Gloves that cover from the fingers to the forearms, made from many materials. | ||
Guard of vambrace | An additional layer of armour that goes over cowter, in which case it is proper to speak of the lower cannon of the vambrace which is the forearm guard, and the upper cannon of vambrace which is the rerebrace. | ||
Leg | |||
Chausses | Mail hosen, either knee-high or covering the whole leg. | ||
Poleyn | 13th | Plate that covers the knee, appeared early in the transition from mail to plate, later articulated to connect with the cuisses and schynbald or greave. Often with fins or rondel to cover gaps. | |
Schynbald | 13th to 15th | Antiquity, lost but later reintroduced. Plate that covered only the shins, not the whole lower leg. | |
Greave | Covers the lower leg, front and back, made from a variety of materials, but later most often plate. | ||
Cuisse | Plate that cover the thighs, made of various materials depending upon period. | ||
Sabaton or solleret | Covers the foot, often mail or plate. | ||
Tasset or tuille | Bands hanging from faulds or breastplate to protect the upper legs. | ||
Various | |||
Gousset | 14th | Mail that protects areas not covered by plate. | |
Lame | Band of steel plate, put together severally so that several bands can articulate on various areas like around the thighs, shoulders or waist. Such pieces are named for the number of bands, for instance, a fauld of four lame. | ||
Arming doublet or gambeson | Padded cloth worn under a harness. | ||
Rondel | Any circular plate. Rondels protecting various areas may have particular names, such as a besagew protecting the shoulder joint. | ||
The following components of Japanese armour roughly match the position and function of certain components of occidental armour:
Chain mail is a type of armour consisting of small metal rings linked together in a pattern to form a mesh. It was generally in common military use between the 3rd century BC and the 16th century AD in Europe, and longer in Asia and North Africa. A coat of this armour is often referred to as a hauberk, and sometimes a byrnie.
Bōgu, properly called kendōgu, is training armour used primarily in the Japanese martial art of kendo, with variants used for jūkendō, tankendo, and naginata.
Plate armour is a historical type of personal body armour made from bronze, iron, or steel plates, culminating in the iconic suit of armour entirely encasing the wearer. While there are early predecessors such as the Roman-era lorica segmentata, full plate armour developed in Europe during the Late Middle Ages, especially in the context of the Hundred Years' War, from the coat of plates worn over mail suits during the 14th century.
White armour, or alwyte armour, was a form of plate armour worn in the Late Middle Ages characterized by full-body steel plate without a surcoat. Around 1420 the surcoat, or "coat of arms" as it was known in England, began to disappear, in favour of uncovered plate. Areas not covered by plate were protected by mail sewn to the gambeson underneath.
Kabuto is a type of helmet first used by ancient Japanese warriors, and in later periods, they became an important part of the traditional Japanese armour worn by the samurai class and their retainers in feudal Japan.
A gorget, from the French gorge meaning throat, was a band of linen wrapped around a woman's neck and head in the medieval period or the lower part of a simple chaperon hood. The term later described a steel or leather collar to protect the throat, a set of pieces of plate armour, or a single piece of plate armour hanging from the neck and covering the throat and chest. Later, particularly from the 18th century, the gorget became primarily ornamental, serving as a symbolic accessory on military uniforms, a use which has survived in some armies.
A gauntlet is a variety of glove, particularly one having been constructed of hardened leather or metal plates which protected the hand and wrist of a combatant in Europe between the early fourteenth century and the Early Modern period. Today it can also refer to an extended cuff covering the forearm as part of a woman's garment.
A brigandine is a form of body armour from the Middle Ages. It is a garment typically made of heavy cloth, canvas or leather, lined internally with small oblong steel plates riveted to the fabric, sometimes with a second layer of fabric on the inside.
Korean armor is armor that was traditionally used in ancient times by Koreans, those fighting in and on behalf of Korea, or Koreans fighting overseas. Examples of armor from the Korean Peninsula date back to at least the Korean Three Kingdoms period. Depending on the tactical situation, Korean armor also included horse-armor and other kinds of early anti-ballistic armor before the 20th century.
Sangu is the term for the three armour components that protected the extremities of the samurai class of feudal Japan.
Auxiliary armour in a set of Japanese armour are optional pieces worn by the samurai class of feudal Japan in addition to the traditional six armour components.
Mail and plate armour is a type of mail with embedded plates. Armour of this type has been used in the Middle East, North Africa, Ottoman Empire, Japan, China, Korea, Vietnam, Central Asia, Greater Iran, India, Eastern Europe, and Nusantara.
Mirror armour, sometimes referred to as disc armour or as chahār-āyneh or char-aina, was a type of cuirass used mainly in Asia, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe; including Indian, Persia, Tibet, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire. It literally translates to "four mirrors" which is a reflection of how these pieces looked, which resembles four metal discs or rectangular armour plates. Mirror armor was used in some cultures up to the 20th century.
Scholars agree that Japanese armour first appeared in the 4th century, with the discovery of the cuirass and basic helmets in graves. It is thought they originated from China via Korea. During the Heian period (794-1185), the unique Japanese samurai armour ō-yoroi and dō-maru appeared. The Japanese cuirass evolved into the more familiar style of body armour worn by the samurai known as the dou or dō, with the use of leather straps (nerigawa), and lacquer for weatherproofing. Leather and/or iron scales were also used to construct samurai armours, with leather and eventually silk lace used to connect the individual scales (kozane) of these cuirasses. In the 16th century, Japan began trading with Europe, during what would become known as the Nanban trade. This was the first time matchlock muskets were imported, and as they became mass-produced domestically, samurai needed lighter and more protective armour. As a result, a new style of armour called tosei-gusoku (gusoku), which means modern armour, appeared. When a united Japan entered the peaceful Edo period, samurai continued to use both plate and lamellar armour as a symbol of their status.
Kikko are small iron or hardened leather, hexagon shaped armour plates used in the construction of Japanese armor worn by samurai and ashigaru of feudal Japan.
Laminar armour is an armour made from horizontal overlapping rows or bands of solid armour plates called lames, as opposed to lamellar armour, which is made from individual armor scales laced together to form a solid-looking strip of armor. Prominent examples of such armour are lorica segmentata of Ancient Rome and certain versions of samurai armour.
Tatami (畳具足), or tatami gusoku and gusoku, was a type of lightweight portable folding Japanese armour worn during the feudal era of Japan by the samurai class and their foot soldiers (ashigaru). The Tatami dō or the tatami katabira were the main components of a full suit of tatami armour.
Dō or dou is one of the major components of Japanese armour worn by the samurai class and foot soldiers (ashigaru) of feudal Japan.
Kusari gusoku (鎖具足) is the Japanese term for mail armour. Kusari is a type of armour used by the samurai class and their retainers in feudal Japan. When the word kusari is used in conjunction with an armoured item it usually means that the kusari makes up the majority of the armour defence.
Karuta was a type of armour worn by samurai warriors and their retainers during the feudal era of Japan. The word karuta comes from the Portuguese word meaning "card", (carta) as the small square or rectangular plates that compose the armour resemble traditional Japanese playing cards.