Poleyn

The poleyn or genouillere was a component of Medieval and Renaissance armor that protected the knee. During the transition from mail armor to plate armor, this was among the earliest plate components to develop. They first appeared around 1230[1] and remained in use until 1650 when firearms made them obsolete.

Poleyn, 1555–60

The specifics of poleyn design varied considerably over that period. The earliest poleyns were strapped over mail chausses.[1] Fourteenth century and early fifteenth century poleyns usually attached to padded leggings or plate cuisses. During the fifteenth century poleyns developed an articulated construction that attached to the cuisses and schynbalds or greaves. A characteristic of late fifteenth century Gothic plate armor was a projection that guarded the side of the knee.

Citations

  1. Walker 2013, p. 77.
gollark: Bees can't factor numbers thus no.
gollark: Besides, that would break the thing where you can choose which UTF to use individually per character.
gollark: u64? This is not a float thus no.
gollark: The floats won't be for strings but individual codepoints (well, as a few bytes) so they are numbers and not not numbers.
gollark: Those will be handled separately.

References

  • Walker, Paul (2013). The History of Armour 1100-1700. Ramsbury: Crowood Press. ISBN 978-1847974525.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.