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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CHAP. I
THE AGE OF MAIL
27
the back of the helm is shorter than the front, as on Fig. 4, and in
this kind also we sometimes find breathing holes added. The Great
Seals of the kings are a most useful guide in discovering the
accoutrements of each period, and especially so for the helms and
helmets, which are easier to distinguish than the more minute
details of dress and equipment. It will be understood that in
time the flat-topped helm was given up in favour of the ‘Sugar-
loaf ’ helm (Fig. 5), as it is generally called, when we consider the
importance of a ‘ glancing surface ’ in armour. Although thick-
ness of material was of some importance in defensive armour, this
providing of surfaces from which a weapon would slip was considered
to be of supreme importance by the armour-smiths of later periods.
In the conical helm, as indeed in nearly all great helms, the vision
and breathing apertures were pierced in the plates of the helm
itself and were not part of a movable visor, as was the case in
the helmet. The weight of these helms must have been great ; for
they do not seem to have been bolted on to the shoulders, as were
the fifteenth and sixteenth century tilting helms, but to have
rested upon the crown of the head. The drawing on Plate I, No. 8,
shows a padded cap which was worn under the mail to protect
the head from pressure. On No. 12 of the same plate we see the
helm being put on over the mail coif ; the padded cap is worn
under the mail. For tournaments the helm was sometimes made
of toughened leather, which was called ‘ cuirbouilli ’ from the fact
that it was prepared by being boiled in oil and then moulded to
shape. This material was very strong and serviceable and was
used, as we shall see later on, for reinforcing the chain armour and
also for horse armour. It was generally decorated with gilding
and painting. For the tournament held at Windsor in 1278 we
find mention of ‘ xxxviii galee de cor ’? As we have shown, these
great helms were not attached to the body armour and were thus
liable to be struck off in battle. In order to recover them a chain
was sometimes stapled to the helm and fastened to the waist or
some portion of the body armour (Fig. 6).
1 Archaeologia, xvii.