- from
spaulders in the 15th century. As with spaulders,
pauldrons cover the
shoulder area.
Pauldrons tend to be
larger than spaulders,
covering the armpit...
- was
utilized in both
pauldrons and cuisses, as they
could better envelop body and
fully replaced laminar and
lamellar pauldron and t****ets. So a typical...
-
without besagues might employ larger shoulder defenses, such as
winged pauldrons, or
simply leave the mail
beneath exposed. Edge,
David and Paddock, John...
- instance, a set of
transitional style arm
defenses could employ steel pauldrons,
leather rerebraces,
steel elbow cops and
leather vambraces.
These items...
-
Kabuto (helmet) Dō (cuir****) Kote (vambrace and
lower pauldron) Han kote (gauntlet) Sode (roughly
pauldron)
Suneate (greave)
Kusazuri (fauld or t****et) Wakibiki...
- and
water supplies.
Sandtroopers can be
distinguished by
their colored pauldrons which indicate rank:
black for enlisted,
white for sergeants, and orange...
- the neck-to-shoulder region. The ****ine
often had
fasteners so that
pauldrons could be attached. In women's fashion, the ****ine was most po****r during...
-
Suits of
white armour were
composed of a helmet, a
gorget (or bevor),
pauldrons with
gardbraces in
Italian and
French armour to
cover the armpits, or...
- West
during the 14th century,
appearing more
often in the 1300s.
Unlike pauldrons,
spaulders do not
cover the armpits.[citation needed] Instead, the gaps...
-
mirror cuir****,
which sometimes had
additional mirror plates used as
pauldrons for
protection of the
shoulder laces.
Besides separate mirror plates laced...