When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of medieval armour components - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_medieval_armour...

    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 ...

  3. Sabaton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabaton

    The sabaton was not commonly used by knights or men at arms fighting on foot. Instead, many would simply wear leather shoes or boots. Heavy or pointy metal footwear would severely hinder movement and mobility on the ground, particularly under wet or muddy conditions.

  4. Poulaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poulaine

    The poulaine proper was a shoe or boot of soft material whose elongated toe (also known as a poulaine or pike) frequently required filling to maintain its shape. The chief vogue for poulaines spread across Europe from medieval Poland in the mid-14th century and spread across Europe, reaching upper-class England with the 1382 marriage of Richard ...

  5. List of mythological objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mythological_objects

    Mythological objects encompass a variety of items (e.g. weapons, armor, clothing) found in mythology, legend, folklore, tall tale, fable, religion, spirituality, superstition, paranormal, and pseudoscience from across the world. This list is organized according to the category of object.

  6. Chausses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chausses

    Chausses were also worn as a woollen legging with layers, as part of civilian dress, and as a gamboised (quilted or padded) garment worn under mail chausses.. The old French word chausse, meaning stocking, survives only in modern French as the stem of the words chaussure (shoe) and chaussette (sock) and in the tongue-twister:

  7. Squire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squire

    Boys served a knight as an attendant, doing simple but important tasks such as saddling a horse or caring for the knight's weapons and armour. [11] Many squires were hired servants with no known pedigree. [3] While many squires were young men who would eventually become knights, others were of too low a rank to become a knight.

  8. Plate armour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plate_armour

    The cost of a full suit of high quality fitted armour, as opposed to the cheaper munition armour (equivalent of ready-to-wear) was enormous, and inevitably restricted to the wealthy who were seriously committed to either soldiering or jousting. The rest of an army wore inconsistent mixtures of pieces, with mail still playing an important part.

  9. English medieval clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_medieval_clothing

    Shoes, as the Cunningtons say, were "open over the foot and fastened in front of the ankle with a strap secured by a brooch or buckle". [54] For the wealthy, the bands on shoes were decorated and designs were often found "over the foot or around the heel". [54] Different styles of shoes began to appear during this era.