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Research Results For 'Visor'

ARMET-PETIT

An armet-petit was a form of round iron helmet with a visor and gorget and a face guard of three bars in place of the beaver of an armet-grand.
Research Armet-Petit

ARMET

Picture of Armet

An armet was a form of round iron helmet with a visor, beaver and gorget worn between the 13th and 15th centuries.
Research Armet

ARMOUR

Picture of Armour

Armour is body protection worn in battle. The invention of gunpowder led, by degrees, to the virtual abandonment of armour until the Great War, when the helmet reappeared as a defence against shrapnel. Modern armour, used by the army, police, security guards, and people at risk from assassination, uses nylon and fibreglass and is often worn beneath clothing.

Some kind of defensive covering was probably of almost as early invention as weapons of offence. The principal pieces of defensive armour used by the ancients were shields, helmets, cuirasses, and greaves. In the earliest ages of Greece the shield is described as of immense size, but in the time of the Peloponnesian war about 420 BC, it was much smaller. The Romans had two sorts of shields; the scutum, a large rectangular highly convex shield, carried by the legionaries ; and the parma, a small round or oval flat shield, carried by the light-armed troops and the cavalry. In the declining days of Rome the shields became larger and more varied in form. The helmet was a characteristic piece of armour among the Assyrians, Greeks, Etruscans, and Romans. Like all other body armour it was usually made of bronze. The helmet of the historical age of Greece was distinguished by its lofty crest. The Roman helmet in the time of the early emperors fitted close to the head, and had a neck-guard and hinged cheek-pieces fastened under the chin, and a small bar across the face for a visor. Both Greeks and Romans wore cuirasses, at one time of bronze, but latterly of flexible materials. Greaves for the legs were worn by both, but among the Romans usually on one leg. The ancient Germans had large shields of plaited osier covered with leather, afterwards their shields were small, bound with iron, and studded with bosses. The Anglo-Saxons had round or oval shields of wood, covered with leather, and having a boss in the centre; and they had also corselets, or coats of mail, strengthened with iron rings. The Normans were well protected by mail; their shields were somewhat triangular in shape, their helmets conical. In Europe generally metal armour was used from the tenth to the eighteenth century, and at first consisted of a tunic made of iron rings firmly sewn flat upon strong cloth or leather. The rings were afterwards interlinked one with another so as to form a garment of themselves,
called chain- mail.

Great variety is found in the pattern of the armour, and in some cases small pieces of metal were used instead of rings, forming what is called scale-armour. A suit of armour consisting of larger pieces of metal, called plate-armour, was now introduced, and the whole body came to be encased in a heavy metal covering. The various forms of ring or scale armour were gradually superseded by the plate-armour, which continued to be worn until long after the introduction of firearms and field-artillery. A complete suit of armour was an elaborate and costly equipment, consisting of a number of different pieces, each with its distinctive name. In 19th century European armies the metal cuirass was still to some extent in use, the cuirassiers being heavy cavalry; and it is was said that this piece of armour provided a useful defence against the rifle bullets of the time. During all the time that the use of heavy armour prevailed, the horsemen, who alone were fully armed, formed the principal strength of armies; and infantry were generally regarded as of hardly any account. England was, however, an exception, as the English archers were almost at all times, before the invention of gunpowder, an important and sometimes the chief force in the army.
Research Armour
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BASCINET

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A bascinet or basinet was a 14th and 15th century light helmet, generally conical in shape and without a visor, which was so named from its similarity in appearance to a basin. Sometimes a detachable visor was fitted, these were often pointed with slits for the wearer to see through and perforated to enable breathing.
Research Bascinet

MORION

Picture of Morion

A morion was a helmet made of iron, steel or brass, somewhat like a hat in shape, often with a crest or comb over the top, and without a beaver or visor. They were introduced into Britain from France or Spain around the beginning of the 16th century.
Research Morion

SALLET

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A sallet (salade) was a light medieval helmet usually with a vision slit or movable visor.
Research Sallet

VENTAIL

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In armour, a ventail was the lower movable part of the front of the helmet, which admitted air for breathing, the upper part being the visor.
Research Ventail

VISOR

Picture of Visor

In armour, a visor is that part of a helmet which defends the face, and which can be lifted up and down as required by the wearer. They were perforated with holes for seeing and breathing.
Research Visor

HVD

HVD is an abbreviation for Helmet Visor Display
Research HVD

HVHMD

HVHMD is an abbreviation for Holographic Visor Helmet Mounted Display
Research HVHMD

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