Armour & Weapons
Forfatter: Charles Ffoulkes
År: 1909
Forlag: At The Clarendon Press
Sted: Oxford
Sider: 112
UDK: 623 Ffou
With A Preface By Viscount Dillon, V.P.S.A. Curator Of The Tower Armouries
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24
THE AGE OF MAIL
CHAP. I
hauberk, called the Haubergeon. In his Roman de Rou he writes
of Duke William at the Battle of Senlac :—
Sun boen haubert fist demander,1
while of Bishop Odo he says :—
Un haubergeon aveit vestu
De sor une chemise blanche.
The fact that he mentions the tunic (‘ chemise blanche ’) seems to
imply that it was seen beneath the hem of the haubergeon, which
would not be the case with the long-skirted hauberk. Occasionally
in illuminated manuscripts the hauberk is shown slit at the sides ;
but for what purpose it is difficult to imagine, for it would impede
the wearer when walking and would make riding an impossibility.
The defences of the leg, made of mail like the hauberk, seem
to have been used, at first, only by the nobles, if the Bayeux
Tapestry is taken as a guide. The common soldiers wore linen or
leather swathings, sometimes studded with metal, but in appear-
ance closely resembling the modern puttee. The upper portion
of the leg was protected at a later period with Chaussons, while the
defences from knee to foot were called Chausses. Wace mentions
‘ chances de fer but we must remember, as was noticed in the
introduction, that Wace wrote some seventy years after the
Conquest, and probably described the accoutrements worn at his
own time. The Bayeux Tapestry is nearer the period, as far as we
can date it with any correctness, but here we are hampered to
some extent by the crude methods of the embroideress. The
chaussons are not often shown in illuminations, for the long-
skirted hauberk covers the leg to the knee ; but the chausses
appear in all pictorial and sculptured records of the period, made
either of mail or of pourpointerie, that is fabric studded with metal.
Towards the end of the thirteenth century the chaussons and
chausses were made in one stocking-like form covering the foot ; this
is shown on Plate I, 8, 12. In the first of these illustrations only
the front of the leg is covered, and the chausses are laced at the back.
1 Roman de Rou, 1. 13254 et seq.