Changes
/* Beowulf */
{{stars1| styleCategory ="background: PaleGoldenrod; width: 100%"Armour}}{{TOClimit|- 3}}| scope="col" width="0" |[[File:Stars2.png|110px|frameless|left|link=Completion Ratings|Completion Ratings]]| scope="col" width="1000" style="text-align: left;"|[[Completion Ratings|This article's completion rating is 2 out of 5]]|- | colspan="7" | Preliminary data has been collected but the structure of the article is still fluid |{{Armour}}
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''A mail shirt that stops a couple of inches below the belt. Sleeves are usually to the elbow but can extend to the wrist.''
'''Carolingian'''<br>
<gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">
Book of Maccabees1.png|''Book of Maccabees c.????''
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It would appear that the typical 8th - 9th century mail shirt seems to end just below the belt line. Some of them appear as though they may be vandyked or side split – see below.<br>
===Type 1b: Short mail shirt to just below the waist with long sleeves===
'''Anglo-Saxon'''<br>
<gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">
Franks Casket.png|Franks Casket c.700-750
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'''Carolingian'''<br>
<gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">
BNF_Lat._12048_Gellone_Sacramentary.JPG|BNF Lat. 12048 Gellone Sacramentary, c.790-795
</gallery>
===Type 1c: Short Vandyked mail shirt to just below the waist with short sleeves===
''Vandykes are a triangular finish to the hem and sometimes the cuff of a mail shirt.''
'''Anglo-Saxon'''<br>
<gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">
T49 f.18v 1.png|''BL Cotton Cleopatra C VIII f.18v, c.1000''
BL Cotton Cleopatra CVIII f.27v.png|''BL Cotton Cleopatra C VIII, f.27v, c.1000''
</gallery>
'''Carolingian'''<br>
<gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">
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We have a few pictures that can be interpreted as Vandyked shirts. London, BL, Cotton Cleopatra C VIII f.18v dated to the late C10th is perhaps the most famous although it may not actually be a mail shirt.
[Migration era evidence?]
''A side split mail shirt’s skirt is open at the sides. An unsplit mail shirt has an additional side gore added to the side of the skirt to allow movement and offer protection.''
'''Anglo-Saxon'''<br>
<gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">
Mail Shirt (Douce 296 f.40v).png|[[:Category:Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Douce 296|Bod. Lib., MS Douce 296]] c.1025-1050
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''A mail shirt that reaches to the thigh, with sleeves that usually come to the elbow.''
'''Anglo-Saxon'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;"></gallery>
'''Carolingian / Ottonian'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode=Long front split mail shirt to knee="Packed" style="text-align: left;">St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek 141.JPG|''[[:Category:St. Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek, Cod. Sang. 22|St. Gallen, Golden Psalter]], c.833''The Basilewsky Situla (V&A A.18-1933) - Detail 1.jpg|''The Basilewsky Situla (V&A A.18-1933), c.980-81, Milan''Aachen Ivory Situla Warriors.jpg|''[[:Category:Aachen Cathedral Treasury|Aachen Ivory Situla ]] c.1000''La Vie De Saint Aubin 1.png|''[[:Category:Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale, NAL 1390|Paris, Bib. Nat., NAL 1390, La Vie De Saint Aubin]] c.1100''</gallery>
=====Art=====There appears Type 2b: Mail shirt to be 3 distinct types of front mid-thigh or knee with a small split mail shirts depicted in C11th art. A ‘Short split’, ‘Full split’ and the difficult to interpret ‘Bayeux style’. These are discussed in detail delow =====Literature==short sleeves===--=====Archaeology=====--=====Discussion=====They appear common on such sources as ''A mail shirt that reaches to the Bayeux Tapestry thigh, has a small split front and continue back, and sleeves that usually come to make appearances on numerous manuscripts from the 1060’s onwards although they nether totally replace the traditional unsplit mail shirtelbow.''
* 980AD Byzantine [NICOLLE 2005: p.51]
''Interpreted as either a front split mail shirt or alternatively a mail shirt with mail shorts.''
'''Anglo-Saxon'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style=Full Split==="text-align: left;">T86 Hexateuch1.png|Hexateuch c.1025-1050Winchester Carving.jpg|Winchester Carving c.1050-1100Bayeux Tapestry. Harolds Brothers.png|[[:Category:Bayeux Tapestry|Bayeux Tapestry]] c.1076</gallery>
'''Ottonian / Norman'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;"> </gallery> The ‘mail shorts’ theory has been dismissed by Wilson [WILSON 1985] and Grape [GRAPE 1994]. They consider these images to simple show a stylised form of a long split (Type 3b).<br> ==Art=Type 3b: Long mail shirt with a long style split, an integral coif, and short sleeves=== '''Anglo-Saxon'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">* Bayeux Tapestry Mail Shirt (Harley Psalter f.73v).jpg|Harley Psalter f.73, c.1076AD [WILSON 1985]1025-1050* R1 Dijon</gallery> '''Ottonian / Norman'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">Mail Shirt (Genève, Bibliotheque Municipale Bibliothèque de Genève, Ms. lat. 357 - Apocalypse -Beatus).png|Genève, Ms. lat. 357, C11th </gallery> ===Type 3c: Long mail shirt with a long style split, an integral coif, and long sleeves=== '''Anglo-Saxon'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;"> </gallery> '''Ottonian / Norman'''<br><gallery heights=170px mode="Packed" style="text-align: left;">BnF_Ms_Lat._8879_f.148v_Horsemen_of_the_Apocalypse.jpg|BnF Ms_Lat. 8879 f.148v, Horsemen of the Apocalypse, c.1050Dijon Bib. Mun. MS . 14 fol.13 Goliath.png|Dijon, Bib. Mun. MS. 14 f.13, Bible of St. Etienne, Goliath, c.1109-1111AD – Picture of Goliath [SKODELL 2008]1111</gallery> == Mail shirt Construction==
===6 - 8mm alternating riveted & welded===
*Gjermundbu, Norway, 980AD (TWEDDLE 1992) riveted & welded, internal ring size = approx. 5.5 - 7.3 mm.
*Gotland, Sweden, (TWEDDLE 1992) graves 14.7 & 14.8. Riveted & welded, internal ring size = approx. 7.4 – 7.6mm. Interestingly some copper alloy rings were in the Gotland finds.
*Sutton Hoo c.650AD (POLLINGTON 2006, p.152) - 8mm links, alternate riveted and butt-jointed, to mid thigh
*Dublin (HALPIN 2008, p.179)
'''Discussion'''<br>
Most of the Viking Age finds seem to be in this size range.<br>
<br>
===6 - 8mm riveted===
===Riveted links over 8mm===
*Tuna, Gotland (TWEDDLE 1992) has an internal link diameter up to approx.10mm in size
*Russia (D’AMATO 2012, p.34) some links measuring up to 25mm
=== Butted links ===
We have no finds of butted links that have been dated between 800--1100.<br>
<br>
==Copper alloy mail links used for decoration==
''A double row of copper alloy links used to edge mail shirts and aventails.''
*York, England, C8th (TWEDDLE 1992, p.1003) Coppergate helmet,4 links.
*Gotland, Sweden, C9th-12th (TWEDDLE 1992, p.1185) Graves 14.7 & 8. This had two rows of copper alloy links at a possible vertical edge.
'''Discussion'''<br>
The Coppergate helmet possibly had either a double row of copper alloy links edging the aventail or alternatively they could have been talismans. Copper alloy talismans and edges are frequently found on medieval mail shirts (TWEDDLE 1992, p.1003).<br>
<br>
==Lined Mail edged shirts==''Mail shirts that are lined on the inside with cloth or leatherand that have a cloth or leather edging.'' Bayeux Tapestry ==Literature== ===Anglo-Saxon Chronicle===A.D. 1008. <br>"This year bade the king that men should speedily build ships over all England; that is, a man possessed of three hundred and ten hides to provide a galley or skiff; and a man possessed of eight hides only, to find a helmet and mail shirt." ===Beowulf===Written in c.1000 but from an older story.<br>We've started working on a comparison between translations to determine what words may have possibly represented mail shirts.<br><br> * Heorot http://www.heorot.dk/beowulf-rede-text.html * Gutenburg http://www.gutenberg.org/files/16328/16328-h/16328-h.htm * Orford {{listRef|Crossley-Holland 1982}}* Old English Translator http://www.oldenglishtranslator.co.uk/ Note: <br>Corslet is defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as meaning "a piece of defensive armour covering the body."<br> Byrnie<br>Bennet, M., Bradbury, J., DeVries, K., Dickie, I., & Jestice, P. Fighting Techniques of the Medieval World. Thomas Dunne Books, 2005, p. 82<br>'A strip '"There is some dispute among historians as to what exactly constituted the Carolingian byrnie. Relying... only on artistic and some literary sources because of the lack of archaeological examples, some believe that it was a heavy leather sown over jacket with metal scales sewn onto it. It was also quite long, reaching below the edge hips and covering most of the arms. Other historians claim instead that the Carolingian byrnie was nothing more than a coat of mail shirt, but longer and perhaps heavier than traditional early medieval mail. Without more certain evidence, this dispute will continue."'' <br>
{| class="wikitable"
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| Colspan(37) of feorwegum '''frætwa''' gelaéded|| from far-off lands ornate '''armour''' and baubles were brought; || (I 37) The famed by the mainmast. A many of jewels, || And adornments from far and wide were gathered there|| 'frætwa' ="4" style'''armour''' |-| (40) billum ond '''byrnum'''· him on bearme læg || bill-blades and '''byrnies'''; there lay on his breast|| (I 42) Bills and '''burnies'''; on his bosom sparkled || Swords and '''corslets'''; on his breast || 'byrnum' ="text'''Corselet'''|-align: center| (214)|| || || |||-| saéwudu '''saéldon'''· syrcan hrysedon || moored their vessel;"their '''mail-shirts''' clanked | [[Recreation guide|Allowable]](IV 37) Fastened their vessel (battle weeds rattled, '''War burnies''' clattered) || Tying up the boat their '''corslets''' clanked || 'saéldon' = '''coat of mail''' |-| (237)|| || || |||-| (238) '''byrnum''' werede þe þus brontne céol|| bound in '''byrnies''', who thus your tall keel || (IV 49) Clad in your '''corslets''', come thus a-driving A high riding ship || In your '''coats of mail''' who have steered your tall ship|| 'byrnum' = '''Corselet'''|-| (322) heard hondlocen '''hringíren''' scí|| harsh, linked by hand, '''ring-iron''' glittering|| (VI 4) The ring-sword radiant rang ’mid the '''armor'''|| The strong links of shining '''chain-mail''' clinked together|| |-| (1211) '''bréostgewaédu''' ond se béah somod|| mail-coat and the ring together || || || 'Bréost' = '''Breast, stomach, womb, mind, richness''', 'gewaédu' = ????
|}
<HarvardReferences />
[[Category:Armour]]