

Kevin P Molloy wrote: |
Do you have info or sources? |
Jean Thibodeau wrote: |
Do you have a source for the pic ? Time and place it was drawn/painted might help us guess what the helm is exactly ?
Could be a bascinet but the rest of the armour looks earlier than when the bascinet became popular. Could be a conical spangelhelm with cheek pieces or extended down to lower neck level. It also resembles a barbute for the face opening ? Makes me think that there might have been a lot of variations in helm styles that we have no knowledge of as this is the first time I have seen this artwork and this exact type of helm: It just seems to have elements of a lot of later helms ? ( Edited, additional: Re-reading the " Topic " title, I now assume that this is Irish art and Irish armour which may have been locally still very much like 11th or 12th century armour even into the 14th 15th and even early 16th century. So, maybe a spangenhelm influenced by bascinet and barbute designs ??? ). |
Kevin P Molloy wrote: |
The information I have for the picture is " Anglo-Irish cavalryman,1583,wearing "Irish" Armour and riding in an Irish saddle without stirrups. |
Jean Thibodeau wrote: | ||
Thanks, the armour shown looks very much like what one would expect from an 11th or 12th century knight wearing a hauberk but I think that in some " backwater " ( no offence intended ) areas of Europe very old fashion styles of armour persisted long after they stopped being used elsewhere. . |