- for leg armour;
routinely made of mail and
referred to as mail
chausses, or demi-
chausses if they only
cover the
front half of the leg. They
generally extended...
- Look up
chausse,
Chausse, or
chaussé in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Chausse,
Chaussé or
Chausses may
refer to:
Chausses, a
Medieval term for leggings...
- long tunic,
which he
wears with
chausses and ankle-high shoes, c. 1170 Men
pruning grapevines wear
short tunics and
chausses. The man on the left
wears a...
- high up,
where it was
protected inside and
outside the leg by his iron
chausses, and then
through the
skirt of his
leather tunic; next it
penetrated that...
- and are the
generic terms for
trousers today. The
French equivalent was
chausses.
Since the 13th century, hose were
already known to have been worn in Europe;...
- Joseph-Alcide
Chaussé (7
January 1868 – 7
October 1944) was a
Canadian architect, best
known for the Egyptian-style
Empress Theatre in Montréal. Joseph-Alcide...
-
considerably over that period. The
earliest poleyns were
strapped over mail
chausses.
Fourteenth century and
early fifteenth century poleyns usually attached...
-
lines drawn from the
corners of the
chief to the
point in base is
called chaussé (shod),
which must be
distinguished from the pile, the
point of
which does...
-
commonly worn by
knights in the 12th and 13th centuries,
usually over
chausses, and may have had
poleyns directly attached to them.
Whilst continental...
- Renaissance,
braies had
become shorter to
accommodate longer styles of
chausses.
Chausses were also
giving way to form-****ing hose,
which covered the legs...