Mongolian lamellar was AWESOME

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @historyofeverythingpodcast
    @historyofeverythingpodcast  Год назад +235

    Watch my video on 3 facts you didn’t know about mongols ruclips.net/video/C90K0PFYH6M/видео.html

  • @roni.da.street
    @roni.da.street Год назад +7975

    Bro's getting ready to "troll" a persian village 💀

    • @SammonPuolustaja
      @SammonPuolustaja Год назад +577

      We do a little bit of psychological warfare 💀

    • @DanS044
      @DanS044 Год назад +420

      Small amounts of inhuman devastation 💀

    • @kamikaze4172
      @kamikaze4172 Год назад +292

      "We do a little tro-"
      "YOU BURNED MY SURROUNDING VILLAGES AND USED PEASANTS AS CANNON FODDER!"

    • @mahogany7712
      @mahogany7712 Год назад +180

      just reducing Human carbon footprint by 10% nothing biggie

    • @dudewithout_a_face5573
      @dudewithout_a_face5573 Год назад +80

      as a persian
      I can confirm he converted to Islam and now his name is abu javad bardia khan

  • @kylieshaye6562
    @kylieshaye6562 Год назад +3327

    The nice pointy helmet is the best part. MUST BE POINTY we want the pointy

    • @synshenron798
      @synshenron798 Год назад +233

      "Pointy is scary"
      - The dictator

    • @geheimeWeltregierung
      @geheimeWeltregierung Год назад +73

      ​@@synshenron798 Well pointy also might deflect an enemy weapon hitting you

    • @LeMeowAu
      @LeMeowAu Год назад

      ​@@geheimeWeltregierung also you can role-play as a guided missile and launch yourself at enemies head first

    • @JayJayM57
      @JayJayM57 Год назад +13

      If you want to have extra fun, Kirby's pointy hat is Mongolian.

    • @beastwarsFTW
      @beastwarsFTW Год назад +15

      That point might also be so it can hold a turban. Turbans actually to provide eye protection from sun and falling rocks so it's functional.

  • @crisr.8280
    @crisr.8280 Год назад +1679

    Gives a new meaning to the statement "Have fun and don't forget to wear protection!"

    • @Tirocoa
      @Tirocoa Год назад +21

      Shit. This is pretty dark.

    • @teh_nooble
      @teh_nooble Год назад +28

      Sorry, but the armor stays ON.

    • @crisr.8280
      @crisr.8280 Год назад +7

      @@teh_nooble at least mongolians don't wear cod pieces.

    • @crisr.8280
      @crisr.8280 Год назад +5

      @@Tirocoa these guys were so brutal, I wonder if Sabaton already made a song of them.

    • @stefthorman8548
      @stefthorman8548 Год назад +4

      @@crisr.8280 they're horsemen, cod piece wouldn't work

  • @Shaso-xv3tw
    @Shaso-xv3tw Год назад +597

    Lamellar is actually fantastic for protecting large groups of people on a budget too, because of the fact that if any of the plates are damaged there’s probably an overlapping one underneath, and when the fight is done it’s relatively cheap to replace the plate and restring the whole suit back together.

    • @thecomentingcat6280
      @thecomentingcat6280 Год назад +16

      Love the tau profile pic

    • @healinggrounds19
      @healinggrounds19 Год назад +14

      If I write a zombie movie, the townsfolk will make and wear laminar armor. You can even make it out of slick paper, like magazines.

    • @genghiskhan6809
      @genghiskhan6809 Год назад +5

      Hence why the Chinese loved it

    • @Dvdas47
      @Dvdas47 Год назад +1

      We alll knows mongaols

  • @verathorn1556
    @verathorn1556 Год назад +553

    It may have worn-out faster than most armors, but at least it was significantly easier to repair than a lot of other armor types, it's a lot easier to replace a small metal piece than a breastplate. Theirs a reason you can see armor similar to this from the bronze age through late into the middle ages in things like brigandine.

    • @Olav_Hansen
      @Olav_Hansen Год назад +42

      Yeah and the little plates can be semi mass produced (cutting cost), every wife was able to repair this contrary to normal armor needing a blacksmiths touch, and as you said it was more repairable.

    • @ismata3274
      @ismata3274 Год назад +5

      And they weren't likely to be walking with this to battle, they are horseriders. Still.

    • @patrickbueno3279
      @patrickbueno3279 Год назад +13

      ​@@ismata3274 depends on what unit the Mongolians decide to send in battle, they are not only light cavalry, they also have some heavy cavalry units.

    • @tillmen4444
      @tillmen4444 Год назад +7

      ​@@patrickbueno3279 still aren't walking, they recruited the conquered people for infantry and siegeing

    • @stefthorman8548
      @stefthorman8548 Год назад +3

      @@patrickbueno3279 all Mongolians were horsemen, the walking ones were allies from vassalized states.

  • @MikeHawkaMildlyStank
    @MikeHawkaMildlyStank Год назад +275

    Lamellar + bow + horse + Mongolian throat singing

    • @ironwill2496
      @ironwill2496 Год назад +6

      Could you use something like this on horseback? Wouldn't the back make it hard to straddle something like a horse?

    • @MikeHawkaMildlyStank
      @MikeHawkaMildlyStank Год назад +14

      @@ironwill2496 there were different versions of lamellar pretty sure, also I’m sure the mongols would find a way

    • @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person
      @Bronze_Age_Sea_Person Год назад +13

      Don't forget the Ayrag to drink with the boys in the camp

    • @tillmen4444
      @tillmen4444 Год назад +3

      ​@@ironwill2496 the back stops at the butt, and you can bend and move in the armor

    • @JamesMadisonsSpiritAnimal
      @JamesMadisonsSpiritAnimal Год назад +3

      ​@@ironwill2496 it's impossible to use anything else my friend
      *Rides off short bowing southerners*

  • @lastone9744
    @lastone9744 Год назад +472

    I just got off playing banner-lord and fought the knock off Mongolians got utterly destroyed this just reminded me of how I just lost three whole towns and two castles

    • @Mx12b
      @Mx12b Год назад +19

      Somehow I managed to get lucky and I wiped them out while not having to deal with everyone else

    • @k_aesar
      @k_aesar Год назад +22

      god I hate fighting the khuzaits

    • @Corndog_Enthusiast
      @Corndog_Enthusiast Год назад +4

      @@k_aesar So annoying.

    • @lukeb1663
      @lukeb1663 Год назад +14

      I’ve been hating these guys since I started playing M&B Warband 6 years ago. After my Nord run, I chose Rhodoks because I heard they were supposed to be good anti cav units but I gave up halfway through and said, “if you can’t beat them, join them.” They are the absolute worst to fight against

    • @FrankieAmadeian.
      @FrankieAmadeian. Год назад +8

      ​@@lukeb1663 * chortles snootily in sieges only *

  • @rypli8309
    @rypli8309 Год назад +157

    I always loved lammelar armors and in Mount and Blade 2 Bannerlord you can actually wear that kind of armors

  • @serhatkarabeyli9818
    @serhatkarabeyli9818 Год назад +78

    Well, if you are a good at fabric work society like the Mongols, repairing the fabric portion or changing it entirely is not difficult if you are not constantly in combat (which, they were not).

    • @patrickbueno3279
      @patrickbueno3279 Год назад +4

      they bring their wives, so they can easily repair them

    • @Orgil.
      @Orgil. Год назад +1

      ​@@patrickbueno3279 wife and childrens,elders are not allowed in campaigns

  • @XxShadow101xX
    @XxShadow101xX Год назад +40

    Me, a Bannerlord and Kingdom Come player:
    Y'know, im something of a medieval armor expert myself 😎

    • @MadMax-bv7vb
      @MadMax-bv7vb Год назад +1

      Two of my favourite games to ever exist

  • @stevencolor3389
    @stevencolor3389 Год назад +97

    Low durability is not that huge of a problem so long as it holds up through a fight.
    As you said it is simple to make and can often be made using whatever was available, that means in theory it is not hard to patch the broken piece after a battle when you return to camp and have some pre-prepped patch pieces, the same way somebody would patch a hole in a pair of pants.
    The ease of production and repairs would help armor a large chunk of an army compared to a smaller chunk of better armored troops if using more expensive methods.

    • @guildedcharr7459
      @guildedcharr7459 Год назад +2

      Even if it doesn't last through a battle, such as the various early bone, and clay armours, its fine. Some protection is better than none.

    • @stevencolor3389
      @stevencolor3389 Год назад +8

      @@guildedcharr7459 I agree that some armor is better than none but I disagee about it needing to last the battle. If it fails mid battle it means mostly the soldier was severly wounded if not killed.
      Use wood chunks as an example, if a piece has a decent cut or has started to split but stayed on the armor in 1 piece it probaby did the job but needs replacing before the next fight to ensure it is still intact.
      However if the piece broke all the way through it probably failed and resulted in a serious wound

    • @guildedcharr7459
      @guildedcharr7459 Год назад +7

      @steven color Obviously lasting more than one strike is desirable, and its why armour goes the way it does. Early brittle armours acted very similar to modern ceramic plates, the bone, clay or other material would shatter on impact yes, but it would disperse enough of the fotce so that the wearer was not killed.

    • @hanelyp1
      @hanelyp1 Год назад

      @@guildedcharr7459 A second hit is unlikely, though not impossible, in the same spot. Accounting for weight it may be acceptable for a single small plate to only be good against a single hit.

  • @GallopingWalrus
    @GallopingWalrus Год назад +3

    "Mom, can you buy me this brigandine?"
    "We have a brigandine at home."

  • @KP_Uravity
    @KP_Uravity Год назад +10

    Whew that is a really clean set of armor. Imagine making something similar out of a super light metal and woven together with like carbon fiber. Some cool old school sci-fi armor

    • @hanelyp1
      @hanelyp1 Год назад +1

      If you're going for modern materials, kevlar or spectra with epoxy for the plates. Maybe even ceramic strike faces for serious ballistic armor.

    • @KP_Uravity
      @KP_Uravity Год назад

      @@hanelyp1 that would be so dope

  • @leman7277
    @leman7277 Год назад +5

    The fabric was not a weak point, it allowed for longer longevity of the armour, hence why we have so many of them in archeology. It allowed replacing the worn out defensive parts rather than replacing the entire thing.

  • @jonakchakrabarti8051
    @jonakchakrabarti8051 Год назад +11

    That armor is so beautiful. And seems like it has great mobility other than the weight.

  • @sleepyspartan1367
    @sleepyspartan1367 Год назад +30

    This is actually where the idea of studded leather came from as the "Studs" are actually from rivets that held the metal plates to the leather. Not technically leather but it is a vary similar concept call brigantine

    • @Olav_Hansen
      @Olav_Hansen Год назад +5

      Brigandine often had a fabric coat on the outside, with the plates on the inside generally being a lot bigger then these mongolian ones. Personally though I think that brigandine is one of the best looking ones, and I figure that since it didn't stand out as very metal-y, some opponents wouldn't recognise how heavily armored the opponent was (at least in the early days of brigandine before it got really popular)

    • @sleepyspartan1367
      @sleepyspartan1367 Год назад

      @@Olav_Hansen acutely leather was a common material but that's neither here nor there. It's just that's where studded leather as a concept came from. I recommend the video on shadiversty

    • @Olav_Hansen
      @Olav_Hansen Год назад

      @@sleepyspartan1367 I do watch shad though.
      I thought that in general it was fabric and only sometimes leather straps.

  • @Erik-pu4mj
    @Erik-pu4mj Год назад +5

    The nerdy enthusiasm gives me life

  • @aboxthatdrools
    @aboxthatdrools Год назад +4

    He got that Mongolian drip!

  • @frog7362
    @frog7362 Год назад +4

    They tried to do this but with modern ballistic plates. It was called I think dragon skin and from what I remember they failed miserably.

    • @Lunkwow
      @Lunkwow Год назад

      Yeah I think it was the expense and weight and now the new XM-5 gone the way of the Dodo.

    • @Incubator859
      @Incubator859 Год назад

      It didn’t fail miserably. Dragon skin is actually VERY effective. What happened is that the US Government decided to use the cheaper single plate armor for its soldiers because it was cheaper and of course, the manufacturer of single plate armor had connections to the Pentagon. It’s just nepotism and corruption at work. The dragon scale bulletproof armor is actually far more effective than the standard armors of today.

  • @DarkAvengerVIM
    @DarkAvengerVIM Год назад +8

    In D&D Terms, this would definitely qualify as Scale Mail.

    • @Cindercrisp
      @Cindercrisp Год назад

      Probably splint armor

    • @DarkAvengerVIM
      @DarkAvengerVIM Год назад

      @@Cindercrisp You're right. I forgot they still include it as heavy armor in 5e.

    • @djay6651
      @djay6651 Год назад

      Depending on how you build it, it's more akin to banded armour, much like the Roman lorica segmentata.

  • @hadesdogs4366
    @hadesdogs4366 Год назад +26

    Plus considering that the Mongolians for the most parts were mounted fighters meant that mobility and flexibility was extremely important

  • @MkUltraNasty
    @MkUltraNasty Год назад +2

    “I sure hope theres no goddamn mongorians that wanna knock down my city wall”

  • @MostlyLies
    @MostlyLies Год назад +17

    It does look badass.

  • @NoalFarstrider
    @NoalFarstrider Год назад +4

    I want it In a Kevlar format with some plate carriers.

  • @kentclark9908
    @kentclark9908 Год назад +4

    I've worn heavy gauge Lamalar and it's not just a bit heavier it's damn heavy compared to brig or plate

  • @vinnyganzano1930
    @vinnyganzano1930 Год назад +3

    Beautiful armour and fairly simple and easy to make.

  • @MinionNumber3
    @MinionNumber3 Год назад +10

    Currently building out my own suit of lamellar

  • @AhintofChan
    @AhintofChan Год назад +3

    It was also mostly used by calvalry, and was often mixed with larger thicker plates in the important parts with thinner plates in the less important so the weight wasn't as much of an issue as with chainmail for ex

  • @GoonGunMonkey
    @GoonGunMonkey Год назад +5

    I remember seeing some like early bronze age lamellar that was made out of bone. I always found that one interesting.

  • @theprodigalson4003
    @theprodigalson4003 Год назад +4

    I feel like I have at least 4 past lives who put that on, looked down at my awkwardly cumbersome body, contemplating how I would move, and just realising I’m gonna die immediately

  • @Jeff5969
    @Jeff5969 Год назад +8

    My dad’s currently making one with leather. Cool vid man.

  • @lisacrooks6281
    @lisacrooks6281 Год назад +2

    Totally badass! Looks like these guys were the inspiration for Klingons on Star Trek ❤

  • @Nobody-Nowhere-USA
    @Nobody-Nowhere-USA Год назад +10

    As they conquered more territory faster then anyone else in history you have to say this armor help in no small way! Of course the genius tactics and logistics helped a lot with that too!

    • @ArthaxtaDaVince777
      @ArthaxtaDaVince777 Год назад +1

      Yeah but this armor existed thousands of years before the mongols.

    • @burntbuddha44
      @burntbuddha44 Год назад

      You sound like you're telling the mongol army "good job sport 😊"

    • @Nobody-Nowhere-USA
      @Nobody-Nowhere-USA Год назад

      @@ArthaxtaDaVince777 yes it did, and just like the Romans they were masters of evaluating their enemies war technology and utilizing what will work best for them. They seldom invented anything themselves but they sure did copy the best!

    • @Nobody-Nowhere-USA
      @Nobody-Nowhere-USA Год назад

      @@burntbuddha44 well thankfully they are not around to be offended by anything I say!

    • @cn4s490
      @cn4s490 Год назад

      @@ArthaxtaDaVince777
      Lamellar armor is widely used throughout Asia and no Asian empire can occupy such a large area as the Mongols

  • @metalavenger23
    @metalavenger23 Год назад +2

    That looks really cool, I’d love to have a set. But maybe in titanium rather than steel. Just as strong but half the weight.

  • @trollman1296
    @trollman1296 Год назад +3

    This reminds me of the Roman Plate armor, but this one cover from chest to the thighs

  • @WERNUTZ
    @WERNUTZ Год назад +1

    Love it. Dude just casually puts on armour just like a spare coat!

  • @Draig-zb2tx
    @Draig-zb2tx Год назад +3

    The one i really love is the "iron pagoda" variant. No idea if it was really used, but that coolness factor is up to eleven.

    • @angsern8455
      @angsern8455 Год назад +1

      They are used by the Jin cataphracts in a group of thousands, they are very intimidating and rather arrow proof. The mongols used to be their vassal.

    • @Draig-zb2tx
      @Draig-zb2tx Год назад

      @@angsern8455 really ? Thanks!

    • @drake9634
      @drake9634 Год назад

      Iron pagoda is my dream armor, that and the "Sassanid Persian cataphract 6th century" if you Google it you will find it, absolutely byutiful

    • @changchadchanamdong2668
      @changchadchanamdong2668 Год назад

      ​@@angsern8455. Based off Chinese armor. Song dynasty.

  • @MrKev-eh2kg
    @MrKev-eh2kg Год назад +2

    As a Ghost of Tsushima player I recognized immediately that it was a Mongolian armor and I agree, it does look very badass!

    • @itheseacow7590
      @itheseacow7590 Год назад +1

      I saw the guy and was like holy it looks exactly like the spearmen

  • @JV2789
    @JV2789 Год назад +3

    Considering how much you love mongolian armor you should check out Chivalry 2 if you haven't already. It has a mongolian faction you can play as and duel other players with medieval weaponry. It's fantastic.

  • @RadarLeon
    @RadarLeon Год назад +1

    Don't forget the silk clothing that was essentially arrow resistant by itself

  • @lnteIIigence
    @lnteIIigence Год назад +1

    That explains how they're such a dominant global power.

  • @alexcrazy1492
    @alexcrazy1492 Год назад +3

    It’s also hell together by fabric though, so wouldn’t it be comfier than others?

  • @MrDracolucassos
    @MrDracolucassos Год назад +2

    Lamelar armour is not hold by cloth :) "scales" are connected to each other by leather stripes.

  • @supernoloo7757
    @supernoloo7757 Год назад +4

    So it’s a mixture between plate and chain mail

    • @saladiniv7968
      @saladiniv7968 Год назад +7

      if you want to compare it with something common in western europe, it's probably closest to a brigandine. pretty much the same concept, but instead of tieing the plates together, they are riveted to the inside of a leather or fabric covering.

    • @supernoloo7757
      @supernoloo7757 Год назад

      @@saladiniv7968 neet good to know!

    • @saladiniv7968
      @saladiniv7968 Год назад

      @@supernoloo7757 they're criminally underrepresented in media. in the 14th and 15th century they probably were the most common form of armor, as they were much cheaper and easier to produce than proper plate armor but offered almost the same protection.

    • @supernoloo7757
      @supernoloo7757 Год назад

      @@saladiniv7968 so something along the lines of budget plate? That’s what I’m picturing

    • @jonajo9757
      @jonajo9757 Год назад

      ​@@saladiniv7968I think a closer comparison would be a jack of plates, which had many small square plates sewn to the fabric. Though I don't know how protectice it was since in pictures, the plates in a row don't overlap, but rather lined next to eachother. It follows tegulated armor than anything.

  • @goliathprojects7354
    @goliathprojects7354 Год назад

    I'm always facinated by how flexible some of these metal armors were

  • @jokig
    @jokig Год назад +5

    What about that shield though?

  • @krishnaprasoon2631
    @krishnaprasoon2631 Год назад

    The weight of that armour and the pressure it gives on the shoulders of the person who wears it... Damn !

  • @My_Alchemical_Romance
    @My_Alchemical_Romance Год назад +1

    Love your work. A friend of the channel. 😊

  • @toddburgess5056
    @toddburgess5056 Год назад +1

    That armor is badazz! I would wear that daily!

  • @18Krieger
    @18Krieger Год назад +1

    I really like this kind of armour.
    Another nice advantage is that its not that difficult to make and mantain.
    Takes a bit of time to make but that is often no problem.

  • @ReggThomastheoneandonolyRegg
    @ReggThomastheoneandonolyRegg Год назад

    Imagine being mid battle and your wardrobe falls apart. Worst wardrobe malfunction in history.

  • @vincentsudario3322
    @vincentsudario3322 Год назад

    Mongolian warriors always been cool

  • @testkanal2mille
    @testkanal2mille Год назад +1

    The key feature is that the small plates are overlapping each other. Riveting the armor would create a higher protection and longevity, but fabric is easier to repair and provides higher range of movement

  • @jopalo31675
    @jopalo31675 Год назад

    Awesome. I’ve never seen a Mongolian lamellar coat of armor. That’s amazing.

  • @Butterwheelz
    @Butterwheelz Год назад

    Mans putting on his Diving gear. Big Mongolian ready for a swim lol

  • @lorddarki9936
    @lorddarki9936 Год назад +1

    These armors are also comfortable to wear, at least Compared to other heavy armor.

  • @Tounushi
    @Tounushi Год назад +1

    the Japanese made lamellar even cooler by lacquering the lamellae in may different ways: individually, in full rows as lames, or as big pieces like the do cuirass.
    A romantic idea I have about lamellar armor is that someone starts with mixed metal/leather lamellar suit and slowly upgrades it to fuller and better metal as he gains money to upgrade the parts, eventually ending up with a full steel panoply.
    And there are so many ways of tying the lamellae together: iron thongs, fabric strips, silk cord, etc. etc.

    • @jonajo9757
      @jonajo9757 Год назад

      I think it was early on when they lacquered individual scales until they made whole semi-solid lames of lamellar.
      It gets even cooler, since this meant you can actually tailor lamellar to secure along your waist.

  • @chriszekableyat9886
    @chriszekableyat9886 Год назад

    That armor is one of the main reason how the Mongolian empire conquered the world and of course tactical strategies.

  • @sargera1
    @sargera1 Год назад +1

    ahhh the old school dragon scale armor lol

  • @ohhgeorge1013
    @ohhgeorge1013 Год назад

    That armor almost conquered the entire earth

  • @kboyyy
    @kboyyy Год назад

    Bro can’t hide his love for war. It’s kind of adorable😂

  • @WarriorLordOfAbyss
    @WarriorLordOfAbyss Год назад

    Bro’s getting ready to try and accomplish what his ancestors failed to do in Tsushima island

  • @TYPICALTRYHARD_
    @TYPICALTRYHARD_ Год назад

    Bro was getting ready to a iron golem a run for their money

  • @seanandersonbey3768
    @seanandersonbey3768 Год назад

    I can't believe how genuinely interesting Ive just found this to be.. 👍

  • @do_not_rotateyour_phone3957
    @do_not_rotateyour_phone3957 Год назад

    This is light for the previous Mongolian body built

  • @jagy__
    @jagy__ Год назад

    When he lift it you already know IT IS HEAVY

  • @nau6at431
    @nau6at431 Год назад

    Dude getting ready to be with the boys on finding the ghost of Tsushima.

  • @notsodandylion694
    @notsodandylion694 Год назад

    I’m just imagining someone swinging a sword across it and cutting the stitches and then it just falling apart like Lego

  • @yooodude1350
    @yooodude1350 Год назад

    Mongolians always had some serious drip

  • @dowon_btw
    @dowon_btw Год назад

    "It looks nice" ahahha the Spike on the Head

  • @stephanieann6622
    @stephanieann6622 Год назад

    My claustrophbia kicked in horribly when he kept on what he was wearing before putting the armor on lol

  • @jakemocci3953
    @jakemocci3953 Год назад

    I have a feeling something like this is going to make a come back with modern materials, something is needed to protect shock infantry from grenade-size explosives.

  • @TheSphongleface
    @TheSphongleface Год назад

    They are strong and handy.
    They had no issues.

  • @priersackh
    @priersackh Год назад

    That armor give psychological debuff for any enemies looking at the wearer. Remember how big Mongolian conquer lands they pass on.

  • @Technoanima
    @Technoanima Год назад

    The real benefit was that it could be churned out in months compared to chainmail which took DECADES to link together. LOTR armorers took 3 years to make their own chainmail doing 10 hour days.
    The average blacksmith still had other routine work to do so it would double or triple the time to produce one chainmail hauberk.

  • @charlesincharge.5161
    @charlesincharge.5161 Год назад

    That old stuff was state of the art at it's time. 📡👽🇺🇸 RUN!!!

  • @lenorevanalstine1219
    @lenorevanalstine1219 Год назад

    that man is gettin ready to go create the largest contiguous land empire in history

  • @chonnyy2475
    @chonnyy2475 Год назад

    At first I thought it looked silly, but once he had the entire suit on I literally came

  • @SlamTheSlammer
    @SlamTheSlammer Год назад

    Back in the day the Mongolians sewed shrew furs together for armor

  • @SadanAhmed-hw4ig
    @SadanAhmed-hw4ig Год назад

    “ now i have become drip, the destroyer of worlds”

  • @wesleyolsen2971
    @wesleyolsen2971 Год назад +1

    A series of armor reviews would be cool 😎👌

  • @calebharding8221
    @calebharding8221 Год назад

    Byzantine and ruso-viking lamellar will always be my favorite armor. Doesn't matter how practical it was, that stuff is so pretty

  • @gilhardfari1474
    @gilhardfari1474 Год назад

    I wear a Mongol lamellar armour in full contact duels and you are right: they have a fair number of weak spots. But they do allow you to move really well too! Besides looking awesome as well 😂

  • @Beware_of_Meh
    @Beware_of_Meh Год назад

    Bro gon make Jin angry 💀

  • @Lunkwow
    @Lunkwow Год назад

    The heft of that armor is nothing to sneeze at.

  • @EricDaMAJ
    @EricDaMAJ Год назад +1

    Held together by cloth also means reasonably easy to repair. Just gotta make sure you check frequently so you don't leave bits of it behind you.

  • @medievalwebman2917
    @medievalwebman2917 Год назад

    Its so sad that society, had forgotten so much of the history and sacrifices of the ancient people... Just so we can sit at home watching youtube shorts at home

  • @paulofelipebbraga9634
    @paulofelipebbraga9634 Год назад

    This was perhaps the equivalent of kevlar vests of ancient times.

  • @TheGelatinousSnake
    @TheGelatinousSnake Год назад

    Wood, leather, metal, ceramic. Even slight combos. Like leather glued to wood was a nice one.

  • @ianbrzeski2381
    @ianbrzeski2381 Год назад

    Early game Rust wipes will never be the same.

  • @hellboy6167
    @hellboy6167 Год назад

    Marathas ripped their ass off without any armour 😂

  • @MonkeyJedi99
    @MonkeyJedi99 Год назад +1

    Regarding the wearing out of the cording, I can attest to that.
    I had some lamellar armor for a LARP and after less than twenty total days of wear I was already having to snug some of the knots as the cording stretched.
    Then after about a year and a half of only using it one weekend a month I was doing repairs more and more often.
    One time, after a tumble from tripping over someone, I had to put in over an hour of repair just to make it wearable for the rest of the LARP event.
    -
    And in none of this was I riding a horse or being attacked with real weapons!.
    So I can easily see the real armor being a constant maintenance item from the first time you use it.

  • @IrishCaesar
    @IrishCaesar Год назад

    It may have worn out faster, but it was highly effective since it could be repaired easily in the field with a sewing kit as opposed to having to send a solid breastplate to an armourer to be repaired. So on a prolonged campaign lamellar armour would actually be more useful than full plate, as it could be repaired easily by an individual soldier, saving the armourers effort and time

    • @Incubator859
      @Incubator859 Год назад

      Yep, a soldier’s wife could fix this while a knight’s armor would need an expensive blacksmith just to have their armor repaired. No surprise Mongols carved out the largest contiguous land empire in history for such a short amount of time.

  • @Justbefree636
    @Justbefree636 Год назад

    now I understand why ancient warriors in movies move really slow when fighting

  • @marksavage5442
    @marksavage5442 Год назад

    The best thing about the armour is the correct outfit underneath that oversized silk coat, the light armor that is weak but for example will take some of the kinetic energy from arrow head ,but as the arrow passes through the armor it will snagg on the silk as it enters the body with the silk; so when the time come remove arrow not only did the silk help slow the arrow down it made it easer to remove because because they would pull on the silk and arrow at same time also it was a cleaner wound and much less damage to surrounding tissue on extraction. Amazing

  • @bigapplebucky
    @bigapplebucky Год назад

    Wearing silk underneath helped a great deal since a silk shirt would spin and arrow and tangle it up before it penetrated the skin.

  • @rolandocrisostomo2003
    @rolandocrisostomo2003 Год назад

    In a high school project, we made one of these using Pringles chips. Then we ate the armor and it gave some of us diarrhea. Good times, good times

  • @justindunlap1235
    @justindunlap1235 Год назад

    This video just popped up directly after dwarven dad was reacting to this armor video.

  • @ofoosy
    @ofoosy Год назад

    lamellar is an incredibly common armor for fighting in the SCA