Scale armour
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Scale armour, Lorica squamata or Leaf Mail (sometimes erroneously called scale mail) consists of many small scales.
The material used to make the plates include bronze, iron, rawhide, leather, boiled leather and horn.Image
There are many different methods of construction:
- Scale armour consists of scales attached outside a backing of leather or cloth
- Lamellar armour consists of scales laced together.
- A brigandine consists of scales riveted inside a backing of leather or cloth.
- A coat of plates consists of plates riveted onto a backing of leather or cloth.
During Roman times scale armour (lorica squamata) was a very popular alternative to mail (lorica hamata) as it offered better protection, especially against blunt damage. It was also very popular in Middle Eastern empires such as Persia and Byzantium where scales were commonly dished (armouring term used to describe hammering a depression into a flat piece of metal in order to create a 'bowl' effect, as seen in the elbow and knee cops of the European Middle Ages) in order to benefit from the extra protection offered by a rounded scale.
Historically, scales for such armour have been made of leather, bronze, iron, or steel; the use of a given material influenced primarily by the time period, geography, and purpose of the armour.
The Byzantine-style lamellar corset is called klibanion. It was often worn over mail, or with limb protectors made from metal splints. Sometimes a quilted surcoat (epilorikion) was worn over klibanion.
Scale armour offered better protection from blunt attacks than mail, however it isn't as flexible or cheap, so it was never that popular.
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