I.m sure everyone is familiar with the leather bracers worn by fantasists and, Renaissance fair goers, and so on. They seem wildly popular as basic "medievalish" equipment, and they are sold so widely that one might assume (and apparently many people do assume) that they were worn by just about everyone, and by some all the time.
But I've rarely seen bracers in any historical art; not even on archers, whom I would fully expect it. I've got a lot of art images archived on my computer and only one contains anything like the ubiquitous leather bracer, but it's not even medieval (see below)
My question is two part then.
First, how widely (if at all) bracers were used, and for what purpose? were they used by archers? blacksmiths? pig herders?
Second, where did the notion come from that they were a standard item of dress from Rome to the enlightenment? Is this a misconception of some Hollywood costumer that stuck, or yet another misguided assumption of Victorian medieval history?

