Hauberk

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Hauberk, Museum of Bayeux.
Hauberk, Museum of Bayeux.

A hauberk is a shirt of mail armour. The term is usually used to describe a shirt reaching at least to mid-thigh and including sleeves. Haubergeon ("little hauberk") generally refers to a shorter variant with partial sleeves, but the terms are often used interchangeably.[1] Slits to accommodate horseback-riding are often incorporated below the waist. Most are put on over the head. Mail is a flexible cloth made of interlocking metal rings. Hauberk can also refer to a similar garment of scale armour.

The word hauberk is derived from an old German word Halsberge, which originally described a small piece of mail that protects the throat and the neck (the 'Hals'). The Roman author Varro attributes the Celts with inventing mail. The earliest extant example was found in Ciumesti in modern Romania and is dated to the 4th-5th centuries BC. Roman armies adopted similar technology after encountering it. Mail armour spread throughout the world with the expansion of the Romans and was quickly adopted by virtually every iron using culture in the world, with the exception of the Chinese, who used it rarely dispite being heavily exposed to it from other cultures.

The Bayeux Tapestry, a long embroidered cloth which depicts scenes commemorating the Battle of Hastings (ca. 1066) illustrates Norman soldiers wearing a knee length version of the hauberk with three-quarter length sleeves split from hem to crotch to make riding possible.

A hauberk dating from the 12th century stored in the Prague Cathedral is one of the earliest surviving examples in Central Europe and was supposedly owned by Saint Wenceslaus. In Europe, use of mail hauberks continued up until the 14th century, when plate armor began to supplant it, and mail armour started to be recycled into other metal objects or used for scouring pads. In parts of Central Asia, it continued to be used for longer.

The hauberk is typically a type of mail armor which is constructed of loops of metal woven into a tunic or shirt. The sleeves sometimes only went to the elbow, but often were full arm length, with some covering the hands with a supple glove leather face on the palm of the hand, or even full mail gloves. It was usually thigh or knee length, with a split in the front and back to the crotch so the wearer could ride a horse. It sometimes incorporated a hood, or coif.

Elements of Medieval armour
 Arms 

Couter | Gauntlet | Pauldrons | Rerebrace | Spaulders | Vambrace

 Head and neck 

Aventail  | Bevor  | Gorget

 Legs 

Chausses  | Greaves  | Poleyns  | Sabatons  | Tassets

 Torso 

Cuirass | Faulds | Hauberk

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