Greaves (lower leg armour)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 июл 2024
  • They are somewhat beaten up, but they still work.
    My legs, I mean. The greaves are past their best too.
    www.LloydianAspects.co.uk

Комментарии • 541

  • @adrenochromejunkie
    @adrenochromejunkie 9 лет назад +664

    You might think that there's no need for these in modern life, but the corners of many shin-height coffee tables have proved that these are an absolute necessity.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 8 лет назад +11

      +Mister Babadook there are still in use only now they are made out of mostly plastics or composites.
      And much lighter.

    • @adrenochromejunkie
      @adrenochromejunkie 8 лет назад +4

      sirBrouwer
      I need to find one then.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 8 лет назад +5

      Mister Babadook just go to your local sports store. Or you could nick them off the feeds of your local SWAT team.

    • @adrenochromejunkie
      @adrenochromejunkie 8 лет назад +19

      sirBrouwer
      The second one sounds much more legal and safe.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 8 лет назад +4

      Exactly who would expect that to happen.

  • @BrokenLifeCycle
    @BrokenLifeCycle 10 лет назад +233

    Only a real man can literally beat and pound their armor on to fit... This guy definitely fits that category...

  • @mirandusings
    @mirandusings 8 лет назад +389

    Great defense against greave-ous injury.

    • @TheDestrab
      @TheDestrab 8 лет назад +50

      +Mirandu Kan That pun was *sheet*

    • @HellYeahCorp
      @HellYeahCorp 8 лет назад +47

      +TheDestrab Your reply, though, was so bad you might need to *leg* it out of the country.

    • @TheDestrab
      @TheDestrab 8 лет назад +48

      When I make jokes, I don't *plate* around

    • @HellYeahCorp
      @HellYeahCorp 8 лет назад +41

      Still, it's going to need some *polishing* if you really want to make it *shin*.

    • @TheDestrab
      @TheDestrab 8 лет назад +42

      I see, it seems I must use puns more *calf*-fully

  • @bobmilaplace3816
    @bobmilaplace3816 10 лет назад +181

    That would had been an awesome Spartan Training "Wanna be a Man?" "We gonna beat your armor on you, snug fitting and custom."

    • @PsylomeAlpha
      @PsylomeAlpha 9 лет назад +103

      "now get ready for the codpiece."

    • @youlostabetwithsatanandnow8592
      @youlostabetwithsatanandnow8592 7 лет назад +19

      AHA!!! THATS HOW THEY GOT THEIR 8 PACKS INDENTED INTO THEIR ARMOR
      THIS SOUNDS LIKE A VERY PLAUSABLE EXPLENATION!!!
      P.S.
      TO ALL THOSE WHO THINK I'M JOKING- FUQ YOU I'M BEING SERIOUS.

    • @sophiejones7727
      @sophiejones7727 7 лет назад +2

      haha! they used bronze though, and bronze armor is cast not hammered.

    • @PsylomeAlpha
      @PsylomeAlpha 7 лет назад +2

      Actually, Sophie, they cast bronze and hammered it to harden and shape it instead of quenching it because it fractures (somewhat explosively) when its temperature changes that drastically.

  • @lukutiss1324
    @lukutiss1324 9 лет назад +209

    You hammering your own leg reminded me of this scene from Lawrence of Arabia:
    -It damn well 'urts!
    -Certainly it hurts.
    -Well, what's the trick then?
    -The trick, William Potter, is not minding that it hurts.

  • @13pen537
    @13pen537 10 лет назад +276

    You'd think that many adventurers in Skyrim would benefit from such armor,,,

    • @GrandHighGamer
      @GrandHighGamer 10 лет назад +7

      Skyrim does have greaves. What the hell armour are you wearing that just leaves your character's legs bare?

    • @matthew9256
      @matthew9256 10 лет назад +17

      Gradius Some lighter armours leave the legs bare.

    • @nukeclears
      @nukeclears 10 лет назад +4

      The sentence means getting married but whatever.

    • @Kronecraft
      @Kronecraft 9 лет назад +2

      That would be a Poleyn not a greave but whatever...

    • @SyntheticFuture
      @SyntheticFuture 9 лет назад +2

      No spears in Skyrim, so they are not that needed ;)

  • @dIRECTOR259
    @dIRECTOR259 8 лет назад +261

    Is that how you make helmets too? :D

    • @clintcarpentier2424
      @clintcarpentier2424 8 лет назад +42

      +dIRECT0R Nope, that would have been too difficult. They would have had to have an apprentice sit still, while the master helmet maker would beat the metal around his head.

    • @dIRECTOR259
      @dIRECTOR259 8 лет назад +9

      +Clint Carpentier I'm sure Lloyd figured it out, and all by himself too.

    • @napornik
      @napornik 8 лет назад

      +dIRECT0R
      Long time ago.
      xD

    • @youlostabetwithsatanandnow8592
      @youlostabetwithsatanandnow8592 7 лет назад +5

      Clint afterwards how would they tear the helmet off that bloody dead corpse?
      -child

    • @migfrarummet1907
      @migfrarummet1907 7 лет назад +9

      I think he just strapped s piece of sheet metal on his head and then just headbutted a hammer!

  • @bigbrowntau
    @bigbrowntau 8 лет назад +58

    From experience fighting in armour in Australia in 40 degree C (~105 F), yes, you want something between your skin and the hot, Hot, HOT metal that is your armour...ouch, ouch, ouch! You suggested linings in Greek greaves....definitely a good idea. Thanks for sharing this with everyone. Thoroughly enjoy your videos!

    • @clonetf141
      @clonetf141 8 лет назад +1

      +Browntau why wear metal armour we have battle suits

    • @bigbrowntau
      @bigbrowntau 8 лет назад +2

      +clonetf141 Battle suits... perfect for hostile takeovers. :) ( I'm in a re-enactment society, and 21st century armour is hard to document as being available in the Middle Ages. ) Also, it's hard to get kevlar greaves.

    • @firecage7925
      @firecage7925 8 лет назад +3

      +Browntau .....Kevlar Greaves....that is bloody genius!

    • @KyleAnvilSlinger
      @KyleAnvilSlinger 7 лет назад

      Luckily the abos only got to the stone age, and forgot how to make fire.

    • @lostsanityreturned
      @lostsanityreturned 7 лет назад

      Charming little critter ain't ya.

  • @hunterfindon1018
    @hunterfindon1018 9 лет назад +33

    You made those at seventeen?! Holy crap! Those look so good! To some people, it's crude appearance hinders the aesthetics of the greave. I however, thinks it's crudeness makes it look realistic and battle worn! It looks so cool!!!

  • @youmaus
    @youmaus 8 лет назад +23

    A bowshot from her bowered eves
    A bolt of sunlight pierced the leaves
    And blazed upon the brazen greaves
    Of bold Sir Lancelot

  • @HaniiPuppy
    @HaniiPuppy 8 лет назад +78

    "Arm Greaves" - Is that a bit like how the German word for "Glove" translates as "Hand-shoe"?

  • @roadhunter72
    @roadhunter72 10 лет назад +19

    Greaves in ancient times were not only a protection against the opponent. But als to protect the calves from your own shield banging against your lower legs while you fought.

    • @gordonlawrence3537
      @gordonlawrence3537 9 лет назад

      There is also a school of thought that they were also used for kicking but I'm not convinced.

    • @roadhunter72
      @roadhunter72 9 лет назад +5

      Gordon Lawrence
      I agree, seems shin protection would not be the focus when you are trying to kick someone while wearing sandals

    • @sword7166
      @sword7166 9 лет назад

      RoadHunter72 it depends on the style of martial arts as some do use the shin as a contact point, but I do agree that it was unlikely that the greeks were doing it for that purpose

    • @rexamillion8446
      @rexamillion8446 9 лет назад

      HM01 Maybe they just liked to break out into sudden games of football. (We really need to come up with a better name for American Football one of these days x.x)

    • @sword7166
      @sword7166 9 лет назад

      Ben G it would be hilarious if you guys called it soccer

  • @jeffreyplum5259
    @jeffreyplum5259 9 лет назад +14

    I'd imagine they would keep random brush from your legs as well. One could not count on fighting on well cleared ground, every time. Modern recreations naturally use modern cleared ground. This leaves out much of the effects of wild terrain.

  • @praetoriantiberius529
    @praetoriantiberius529 8 лет назад +106

    Aren't footballers shin pads just modern greaves?

    • @SgtKOnyx
      @SgtKOnyx 8 лет назад +3

      pretty much

    • @GladstnJones
      @GladstnJones 7 лет назад

      That title, I wound give to Baseball leg guards
      ep.yimg.com/ay/sportsunlimited/under-armour-adult-pro-baseball-catcher-s-shin-guards-1.jpg

    • @Life4Metalcore
      @Life4Metalcore 7 лет назад +2

      +GLADHATMAS I assume you mean catcher gear? Those go above the knees and they limit movement quite a bit. I would say shin guards are closer in terms of shape and use

    • @TheArbiterSux
      @TheArbiterSux 7 лет назад +1

      Hockey Shinguards include the knee, but still allow for lots of mobility.

    • @praetoriantiberius529
      @praetoriantiberius529 7 лет назад

      Arbiter Sux Like the Roman Praetorian guards huh?

  • @Giddeshan
    @Giddeshan 10 лет назад +21

    I've always wondered why the Greeks never had any kind of armoring for the top of the foot, like a medieval sabaton. I'd think that getting stabbed through the foot would be a pretty debilitating wound.

    • @sedoskovelha123
      @sedoskovelha123 10 лет назад +11

      They need to run.

    • @dreconit6156
      @dreconit6156 6 лет назад +2

      Achilles: I thought you could run in full plate, including sabatons.

    • @muhamadsayyidabidin3906
      @muhamadsayyidabidin3906 3 года назад +3

      @@dreconit6156 they have in archaic period, but they ditched it along with the rest of limb protection (rerebrace, bracers, and chusses and ankle armor except greaves) in the classical period

    • @muhamadsayyidabidin3906
      @muhamadsayyidabidin3906 2 года назад

      @Jotaro97 cost, maybe? Or because they change their fighting style from individual duel to formation. In battle formation, you don't need such heavy armor to protect yourself. Your comrades would provide cover for your sides and back. And heavy armor just make you less mobile, which is crucial in formation battle.

  • @XyatuX
    @XyatuX 8 лет назад +98

    They can't protect you from a well thrown pommel though.

    • @eelitanskanen8836
      @eelitanskanen8836 8 лет назад +4

      Nothing can protect you from pommels.

    • @XyatuX
      @XyatuX 8 лет назад +6

      I wonder what would happen if two thrown pommels hit each other mid-air...

    • @jakebaumfalk3965
      @jakebaumfalk3965 8 лет назад +3

      +XyatuX It would create a rift in space and time, destroying the known universe in 1.4 nanoseconds.

    • @arturmizuno
      @arturmizuno 8 лет назад +2

      *END HIM RIGHTLY*

    • @arturmizuno
      @arturmizuno 8 лет назад +4

      pommels are the medieval nokias

  • @CrazyCamo
    @CrazyCamo 9 лет назад +3

    wow, I would totally trade my silly ballet school training for some of the experiences senor Lindybeige seems to have had, or not, I don't know. Love these videos.

  • @RolfHartmann
    @RolfHartmann 9 лет назад +2

    I remember reading in the Strategikon a recomendation to craft wooden greaves for the infantry if not enough metal ones were available. Clearly a very important piece of armor.

  • @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin
    @Usammityduzntafraidofanythin 10 лет назад +19

    Lloyd has a bald spot? Evidence that he's a MIDDLE AGED MAN.

  • @googelplussucksys5889
    @googelplussucksys5889 9 лет назад +43

    I made butterknives and he made greaves, eh.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    Some yes, and of course many from the later medieval period.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    Their shields came very low, and their tactic was to get stuck in quickly, and not hang about prodding with a spear. Auxiliaries on the other hand...

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    Yes, some did, but we don't know how common they were. We have more finds of other leg armour (thigh and foot) for some places and periods, suggesting that greaves are not the commonest leg armour, and yet they seem to be by far the most common in the art.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    They are mirror images of each other, so yes, they fit a specific leg.

  • @5thRing
    @5thRing 7 лет назад +8

    I thought vambraces were braces for vampires. Guess not.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I've forgotten most. One made a copper bowl, another a cast bronze skull, another made parts for his motorcycle...

  • @blurglide
    @blurglide 7 лет назад +6

    3,300 to 8. Lindy has about the best like/dislike ratio I've seen

    • @ottopike737
      @ottopike737 7 лет назад

      Unless you have almost no views.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I forget the gauge of metal I used, and have no measuring device, but it is thick enough to do the job. Real armour is mostly quite thin and light. Yes, a spear could penetrate, I'm guessing, with a really good hit at just the right angle, but the spearman would probably spend his time and energy more profitably by attacking me somewhere else.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    Place ball of foot in the wide end and move it down. The slit in the back only has to open wide enough to enable you to slide the thinnest part of your foot through, at an angle (a diagonal from behind/under the protruding ankle bone to in front of the heel). Once the foot is through, let go. Very quick.

  • @yoitired
    @yoitired 8 лет назад +4

    Every time I watch this guy's videos I get the urge to play Stronghold Crusader.

    • @seknight2835
      @seknight2835 6 лет назад

      Duke Nukem the pikemen also wear greaves!

  • @gpdustin
    @gpdustin 11 лет назад

    Just wanted to say that your arms and armor videos are without a doubt my favorite videos on the whole of youtube. I recommend them to all my friends, and have used them to settle debates more than once.
    Thanks, and keep it up!

  • @sebastiantapia804
    @sebastiantapia804 3 года назад

    Been binge watching all things medieval in your channel, very interesting and entretaining. Thanks!

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    We have just one surviving iron cuirass. In some ways iron is easier to work because pieces of it can be welded together very effectively. On the other hand, it can be hard to get a large 'bloom' of iron for large plates. They managed it often enough with other things when they needed to, though. An absence of evidence is not evidence for absence. Iron greaves were possible, and I wouldn't expect them to survive.

  • @maaderllin
    @maaderllin 8 лет назад +3

    I came back here after seeing Knyght Errant's recent video about greaves' misconception.
    He had his leg cast before, so the piece would be hammered on a model, not him. That seems less painful XD

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    No snakes at all in Ireland, and only four types in Britain, and only one that it is poisonous (the adder), and it is very rare that anyone dies from its bite, and they are not aggressive. Pretty much the only way to get bitten is to tread on one accidentally.

  • @NathanielNow
    @NathanielNow 6 лет назад +3

    I prefer to use them as weapons. They deal greavous injuries.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I was in the metal workshop on my own when I used my legs as an anvil.

  • @ihategooglealot3741
    @ihategooglealot3741 3 года назад +1

    metal armour was expensive, I suspect LOTS of stout leather coverings, and, as you point out, relatively thin iron pieces would readily rust away. They'd also be very tempting to recycle when, in peacetime, a person needed a pot.

  • @JoejoeReference
    @JoejoeReference 8 лет назад +1

    I am jealous of this man's skill set

    • @utubenoobie01
      @utubenoobie01 8 лет назад

      He has a particular set of skills!

  • @RuSosan
    @RuSosan 9 лет назад +37

    So, would a proper set of greaves stop... An arrow to the knee?

    • @poopdump2
      @poopdump2 9 лет назад +28

      yup. woulda been a huge success in skyrim.

    • @CptCudlScoops
      @CptCudlScoops 9 лет назад +13

      Then you could be an adventurer again!

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I have both heard it and re[a]d it.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I may one day do a vid about donning a full panoply. Very easy to and quick to don.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    The mail wouldn't breathe so well, and moisture might get trapped on the inside, and it would be difficult to clean. Mail that doesn't flap around is silent anyway. I think they would rather have had the options of showing off their shiny kit, and mixing and matching layers.

  • @FurryAminal
    @FurryAminal 9 лет назад +2

    Strange how the ancient world had plate armour but this was lost until the renaissance took it up again with full harness; even though mail is FAR more tricky to make.

    • @tiamat2009yt
      @tiamat2009yt 9 лет назад +8

      I guess it was to counter the weapons used by the ancient aliens

    • @89tonstar
      @89tonstar 9 лет назад +1

      REnaissance? Full plate armor was around at the end of the 14th century and could have been in full use much earlier. PLate armor never went out of style completely. Helmets and shoulder guards are all forms of plate armor. Maille was just a effective at the time as plate armor could have been.

  • @MaZEEZaM
    @MaZEEZaM 4 года назад

    Thanks for the info, Really nice photo's in the background.

  • @MrKmoconne
    @MrKmoconne 7 лет назад +1

    I remember finding a pair of WWII American putees when I was a kid. I think maybe I bought them in a garage sale. I put them on and played "army" wearing them. I remember feeling invulnerable to briars and any sort of sharp stuff when I wore them. I guess they are descendants of greaves. I don't think any modern soldier wears them now but I always thought soldiers looked smart wearing puttees.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    Just tried that, and I was the second hit! The trousers spoil the look, though, but it was not a warm day.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I had one afternoon to finish them, and I was alone in the metal workshop.

  • @cobalt49
    @cobalt49 10 лет назад +30

    Do people really use the term "arm greaves"? That hurts my brain.

    • @RogaineForEwoks
      @RogaineForEwoks 10 лет назад +22

      "It's cold out kids. Put your hand socks on!"
      "Uh, you mean gloves?"

    • @NeverisQuiteEnough
      @NeverisQuiteEnough 9 лет назад +9

      RogaineForEwoks
      the german word for gloves is Handschuh, literal translation Hand Shoe.

    • @haijyvelho
      @haijyvelho 9 лет назад +2

      RogaineForEwoks
      10/10, made me laugh.

    • @FurryAminal
      @FurryAminal 9 лет назад

      Greaveous, isn't it.....

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi 6 лет назад

      The problem is if you say bracers or vambraces or gauntlets you'll get a gaggle of nerds appearing to correct you on your terminology, at least a few of which claiming no such armor ever existed.

  • @marcuseriksson6443
    @marcuseriksson6443 10 лет назад +10

    Hahaha this guy... Such a fucking badass xD

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I have Lindy hopped in them. There was a reincarnation themed party and I went as Alexander the Great.

  • @treeplanter-bv4gw
    @treeplanter-bv4gw 9 лет назад +1

    fitting those greaves must have been
    a-greave-ing

  • @WakarimasenKa
    @WakarimasenKa 11 лет назад

    You are right, it is interesting that greaves apparantly dropped from use until full plate appeared.

  • @hathiphnath
    @hathiphnath 11 лет назад

    Congrats on your 50th weapon/armour/warfare video! Looking forward for the next 50. =)

  • @klyxes
    @klyxes 8 лет назад +18

    U made greaves in metal shops in school? Where do you live/school you went to so I can go there?

    • @SgtKOnyx
      @SgtKOnyx 8 лет назад +5

      Jolly old England

    • @SgtKOnyx
      @SgtKOnyx 8 лет назад +1

      Jolly old England

    • @anonincognito617
      @anonincognito617 3 года назад

      The school probably had an armoury too.

  • @nuancedhistory
    @nuancedhistory 10 лет назад

    Greaves found at Kunzig were Iron, dating to the 3rd century AD, they were a different shape than the bronze ones. Ofc all the Greek ones date much earlier.
    A find at Vindolanda was linen padding for a greave. Dates c. 1st century AD.

  • @Antoniothe3rd
    @Antoniothe3rd 11 лет назад

    It's amazing how little the design has changed over the millenia. Simple and effective. I've got a pair of almost the exact same design except made with modern plastic as protection against snake bites.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    9 AP in RQ, so a spearman with no damage bonus would need an impale or critical hit to take out a leg.

  • @GigaBoost
    @GigaBoost 11 лет назад

    Great videos as usual, informative and funny.

  • @MMODoubter
    @MMODoubter 11 лет назад

    I said it before,. and I'll say it again: this guy is on my list of 'most interesting people to invite to a dinner party'.
    Fascinating stuff.

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    I've already done one. Hieropolis.

  • @WritingFighter
    @WritingFighter 11 лет назад +2

    03:40 "That's one of it's principle purposes of course, when you're standing in a line with your spear, and everyone else is poking each other with... sharp pointy things."
    Lol

  • @kulnitsky
    @kulnitsky 7 лет назад

    Your channel might be very useful for ASoIAF readers, thank you.

  • @josephsanti6219
    @josephsanti6219 8 лет назад +1

    The entire length of the greaves could had a sheet of leather and the sewn edges at the top/bottom ridge is where it was cuffed over. Would help with cooling and sweat too.

  • @reggievonzugbach2609
    @reggievonzugbach2609 6 лет назад

    As always, very good TYVM

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    Would one on Moghul armour do? It's pretty much the same.

  • @Bygonera
    @Bygonera 11 лет назад

    "Bracer" protects the wrist (from word bracelet), and bracers weren't really used in ancient times, it's a movie thing, since they would've been useless with soldiers using a cuirass but no other arm guards. Shield was used to protect arms.
    Vambrace (no 'r' at the end) is a part of a late medieval plate armour, which covers all the parts of the body, vambrace covers the forearm, and rerebrace covers the upper arm. Couter protects the elbow, pauldron the shoulder and gauntlet of course the hand.

  • @steppin-razor
    @steppin-razor 11 лет назад

    I fuckin love all these videos man.

  • @danielowens238
    @danielowens238 8 лет назад

    I'm grieved to watch this

  • @s1Lence_au
    @s1Lence_au 8 лет назад

    The fact that they still fit you shows how well you've done in all these years to keep fit and remain at a healthy and consistent weight. I suppose once you reach your 40s you may no longer be so fortunate.

    • @s1Lence_au
      @s1Lence_au 8 лет назад

      Unless you're already in your 40s, in which case you've done an even more amazing job at keeping yourself looking young than I had originally thought. The only giveaway would be the dramatically receding hairline.

  • @johnlindsay3647
    @johnlindsay3647 4 года назад

    Greaves were made of metal and lined with a soft felt padding. ... Ancient Greek and Roman soldiers woregreaves, and they're mentioned in ancient literature, including Homer's Iliad. Medieval European warriors used them too, until some time during the 9th century. The word stems from the Arabic gaurab, "stocking."

  • @atari67
    @atari67 11 лет назад

    I love your channel! Very informative, entertaining, and consistent. I hope that you continue to make videos for some time to come. Can I request a video about the realities of armor in RPG's? I know you've touched on it some, but I would love to see a video dedicated to that.

  • @rubbernecker13
    @rubbernecker13 11 лет назад

    People sometimes wear snake chaps in the southern swamps here. You've given me an idea to craft some with pvc pipe and a heat gun for briar, poison ivy, and snakes. Weird that more people don't use those more. I don't know if you have pit vipers in the uk but they're no joke. Getting bit once was enough to make me look. They're the natural equivalent of landmines.

  • @ladyred8862
    @ladyred8862 11 лет назад

    I have never heard that either. I must hang out with a good crowd since my friends have always called them vambraces...

  • @WarbananaOfDA
    @WarbananaOfDA 11 лет назад

    It depends on whether it is designed with lames (overlapping plates) or not.
    Some pauldrons are made to cover not only the shoulders, but also part of the chest, whilst still providing excellent freedom of motion. The Armour of Sir Thomas Sackville is a fine example.
    The issue with movies are that they are always in budget. To create Armour with the same intricacies and laminar design, can cost the entire film budget if they were to put half the main characters in them

  • @MithraisAugustus
    @MithraisAugustus 11 лет назад

    I found your hoplite image as well. Well done, strategos.

  • @theeatifier
    @theeatifier 9 лет назад

    You remind me so much of my awesome uncle - in most ways XD

  • @PavelDodonov
    @PavelDodonov 4 года назад

    Kind of like the leather gaiters I use for fieldwork. Protected me from accidental machete cuts a couple of times! (We use them for protection against the possibility of snake bites)

  • @sejembalm
    @sejembalm 11 лет назад

    For a classic antiquity video game, I recommend Gladiator Begins for the Sony PSP handheld. You play as a gladiator slave, entertaining the Roman spectators in the arenas of 180 AD by hacking other slaves (and wild nasty animals) to bits or getting butchered yourself. The trick to the game is to smash away your opponent's armor and/or hit him in areas not protected by armor. That means bashing away his helmet, shield, or arm or leg protectors to get at meat and bone underneath. Loved that game!

  • @Torome86
    @Torome86 11 лет назад

    Thanks, you're right, I wasn't sure!

  • @AndrewIsbell
    @AndrewIsbell 11 лет назад

    thanks for sharing your insight as always im a new subscriber

  • @chunchoe
    @chunchoe 11 лет назад

    thanks for the reply !

  • @Bygonera
    @Bygonera 11 лет назад

    That is called a manica in latin. It may be made of iron, bronze or boiled leather lamellas, chainmail, scale armour or padded cloth. It covered gladiators right arm, since left was covered with shield (but retiarius wore it on left arm, because he had no shield). Also Roman legionaries wore manicae on the campaigns of emperor Trajan(us) in Dacia, for protection against Dacian falxes (forward-curved swords), which could hit behind shield. Legionaries also wore greaves on Dacian campaign.

  • @MisterKisk
    @MisterKisk 11 лет назад

    Well, if you actually go down to a lot of armour variations within similar types, you'll almost always realize that there is a significantly large influence with fashion. Hence why some Roman hamatas don't have shoulder flaps, but appear around the same period as ones that did (there was really no reason not to have them from a protective standpoint). Same with the usage of squamata and hamata and segmentata within the legions all at the same time, and variations appeared in even the same unit.

  • @thomassayles3699
    @thomassayles3699 9 лет назад +4

    Most brits are like him LOL 'its goin to hurt my leg but oh well its quicker and it will be the shape of my leg'. It also got me thinking Why dont modern day soldiers have a modern equivalent? Just a thought

    • @thomassayles3699
      @thomassayles3699 9 лет назад

      Thanks man

    • @saxonsoldier67
      @saxonsoldier67 8 лет назад +4

      +thomas sayles We do. High Density plastic or ceramic over Kevlar. However, none are rated to stop a direct hit of a high velocity rifle round. The main use is to prevent injury of running into obstacles. Secondary use would be to stop shrapnel or pistol rounds. We run into tough vegetation or furniture much more frequently than high speed projectiles. Within 20 years, I believe that full suits of armor will return to the modern battlefield, albeit will be powered armor. Full protection from AK 47 rounds from head to toe. Expensive? Somewhere close to what an average house costs in the U.S. Thereafter, combat units will be smaller in number of personnel with a huge use of drones/robots.

    • @DaisiesTC
      @DaisiesTC 8 лет назад

      +saxonsoldier67 Protection from shrapnel and debris is actually the primary use for almost all of a soldier's body protection (with the exceptions of heavier body armors that are only used in specialized situations, but protect from a larger number of threats). Most of it can't stop a bullet (especially from rifles) for shit, but will protect your form shrapnel and debris.

  • @connorforce01
    @connorforce01 6 лет назад +1

    I hate how games think that Sabatons, Cuisses and Poleyns are all part of Greaves.

  • @UnCivilEngineerIRL
    @UnCivilEngineerIRL 11 лет назад

    I can't see these slowing you down any worse than having your leg split open by the enemy :)

  • @lindybeige
    @lindybeige  11 лет назад

    Bronze breast plates, larger than greaves, appeared in the bronze age long before the hoplite.

  • @aforerunner1773
    @aforerunner1773 4 года назад

    It's like listening to a time traveler

  • @masonrepka2593
    @masonrepka2593 8 лет назад

    at LARP events, I have slept with grieves on. Easiest armor to keep on in case of nighttime attacks.

  • @pugsrock3171
    @pugsrock3171 8 лет назад +1

    Excellent workmanship. -- and for a seventeen year old ! Thanks for sharing your knowlegde. Pardon my ignorance, and I know this is off topic, but could you do a vid on how bronze age people manufactured 20 foot long spears. I am considering making one , and the thought of using pine dowel from a hardware store makes me sick.

    • @CraftQueenJr
      @CraftQueenJr 5 лет назад

      Pugs Rock I want to know too. I find the making things videos to be some of the best.

  • @MiniMackeroni
    @MiniMackeroni 11 лет назад

    Holy crap! You're right!

  • @TrollDragomir
    @TrollDragomir 11 лет назад

    There are even findings of bronze foot plates hammered into the shape of an actual foot, with toes and everything.

  • @3420undertaker
    @3420undertaker 5 лет назад

    That's cool that u got a workshop

  • @GamesFromSpace
    @GamesFromSpace 7 лет назад

    If I were in a hot climate, I would put the "liner" on the outside, not the inside. Yes, it would be damaged more easily, but not very frequently due to how uncommon actual combat is. And it would be far more comfortable, since it wouldn't get sweaty, and the metal would actually stay a bit cooler, as well as remove heat from the leg.

  • @kaizers2171
    @kaizers2171 11 лет назад

    I also made my own greaves (Video response), i did it by: Placing metal on shin and noticing where i had to form it more, forming it on the anvil, back on the leg etc...

  • @ContradictoryNature
    @ContradictoryNature 11 лет назад

    Slide them on like a big metal sock, really. The metal is springy enough that you can pull it apart a little bit and slip your foot in through the top and it'll clamp down on your leg. Much later, when they made greaves for plate armour that enclosed the entire lower-leg, they'd close it with either latches or leather straps or sometimes a nut-and-bolt configuration.

  • @tennoheika94
    @tennoheika94 11 лет назад

    When you type "greaves" into google image search, the fifth picture is you in an epic hoplite armour.

  • @Wunel
    @Wunel 11 лет назад

    "I've done all kinds of things in these"
    Oh Lloyd, you cheeky devil.

  • @SwordsAndRavens
    @SwordsAndRavens 11 лет назад

    Way to be a sport chief!