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Jack Chains, Splints and Mail Lines
By mid-to-late fifteenth-century cheaper armor for arms and legs showed up. However, there are so many types and variations of these that I don't know if they were all called "jack chains" or if there was a distinction between the vertical metal bars, the vertical mail lines in artistic evidence and the more common "jack chains" style of armor we all know, these attached to gamberson and usually composed of articulated chains and bars riveted to elbow and shoulder pieces of armor. So I would like to know if any of you knows something of these. Are jack chains and splints different names for the same armor?

"Jack chains" relates from the fact it was "chains" attached to the padded jack or from the fact that most or the first examples of it displayed "jack chains" pattern of chain wire?

In Portuguese São Vicente de Fora's panels there are examples of noblemen using these to protect arms and legs; that makes me doubt if they were armor for poorer soldiers only.

Some images
https://ru.pinterest.com/pin/501307002249215571/

https://ru.pinterest.com/pin/362821313715374732/


 Attachment: 126.19 KB
German men-at-arms with vertical mail bands [ Download ]


Last edited by Pedro Paulo Gaião on Sat 14 Oct, 2017 1:06 pm; edited 2 times in total
It has always been my knowledge that 'jack chains' were the shoulder and elbow armor connected by small, thin bars. 'Splints' ---to me, are the vertical bars attached to cloth or leather backing and worn like bracers, chausses, and greaves. :) ...McM
"Mail strips" (liste di maglia) is another term. In all likelihood there were many different types but they never had specific terms. All of the terms you see in various texts were likely applied arbitrarily to all of the different types of armour. It is only today that we are obsessive about having a unique and specific term for every piece of armour.
In a few Castilian inventories I have seen "Cadenas" as a defensive equipment piece.

They are a light, nice equipment for light armoured men or as "undress" kit for rich men, as shown in that Portuguese painting.
Dan Howard wrote:
"Mail strips" (liste di maglia) is another term. In all likelihood there were many different types but they never had specific terms. All of the terms you see in various texts were likely applied arbitrarily to all of the different types of armour. It is only today that we are obsessive about having a unique and specific term for every piece of armour.


Exactly. ;) There are so many different names and descriptions--depending on what part of the world one lives in--that it is a really difficult task to nail anything down to one specific name. :wtf: ........McM
Mark Moore wrote:
Dan Howard wrote:
"Mail strips" (liste di maglia) is another term. In all likelihood there were many different types but they never had specific terms. All of the terms you see in various texts were likely applied arbitrarily to all of the different types of armour. It is only today that we are obsessive about having a unique and specific term for every piece of armour.


Exactly. ;) There are so many different names and descriptions--depending on what part of the world one lives in--that it is a really difficult task to nail anything down to one specific name. :wtf: ........McM


At first I thought they were referred diferently since mail stripes doesn't seen to be much popular in contemporary artwork, but since the evidence suggests that, there's nothing to argue. Perhaps that might be explained by the fact that mail stripes would be more expensive to make than plate iron/steel bars by that time; I often heard mail went into decline because plates were easier and less tedious to make, given the technology available from mid-15th century and so.

Iagoba Ferreira wrote:
In a few Castilian inventories I have seen "Cadenas" as a defensive equipment piece.

They are a light, nice equipment for light armoured men or as "undress" kit for rich men, as shown in that Portuguese painting.


So this was a trend among Spanish nobility as a whole. The fact that some chains in the panels were made of bronze/brass or of flutted steel plates strengthens that. It's interesting to see the nobility using lighter sorts of armor in the more ceremonial or daily occasions.
I think that those could have been gilded. Iberian nobility had brigandines with gilded rivets, cloth covered capacetes with gilded ornaments, and anything "gildable", specially if it made a striking contrast over expensive cloth was their taste for sure ;)
Pedro Paulo Gaião wrote:
At first I thought they were referred diferently since mail stripes doesn't seen to be much popular in contemporary artwork

How do you know? We don't have any medieval drawings with nice tidy labels telling us what they called each piece of armour. What we think of as a mail strip is likely to be completely different to what they thought of as a mail strip. They may be depicted in plenty of contemporary artwork and we don't recognise them.
Mail stripes, Germany, 1370-1380.

[ Linked Image ]
The Jost Amman image of a mail maker (Pantzermacher) mentions among his offerings , Auch Pantzer Ermel vnd Pantzerstrich,, - Also mail sleeves and mail-strips.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/De_St%C3%A4nde_1568_Amman_083.png
Luka Borscak wrote:
Mail stripes, Germany, 1370-1380.

[ Linked Image ]


On the arms they wear mail sleeves. What is on their legs is one suggestion for mail strips, but there are alternative suggestions as well. My point is that we will never know. All we can do is settle on a modern definition, which may not have any relation to contemporary terminology.
Mart Shearer wrote:
The Jost Amman image of a mail maker (Pantzermacher) mentions among his offerings , Auch Pantzer Ermel vnd Pantzerstrich,, - Also mail sleeves and mail-strips.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/20/De_St%C3%A4nde_1568_Amman_083.png


What's the purpose or context of this print?

Dan Howard wrote:
Luka Borscak wrote:
Mail stripes, Germany, 1370-1380.

[ Linked Image ]


On the arms they wear mail sleeves. What is on their legs is one suggestion for mail strips, but there are alternative suggestions as well. My point is that we will never know. All we can do is settle on a modern definition, which may not have any relation to contemporary terminology.


The suggestion for mail strips seems stronger than other, but what these would be? Also, I never saw styles of mail like this, at least not covering the frontal part of the thighs only.

By the way, his left leg greave is of splint construction while the right one is cased in full plate. Somehow interesting.
I'm with you on the mail thigh coverings. That's a new one on me....I've never seen that either. :wtf: I think his greaves are probably matching...you just see only the inside of one, the outside of the other. .....McM
Morgan Library MS M.763 fol. 136r
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Durer, Paumgartner Altarpiece
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Solothurner Fechtbuch (Cod.S.554)
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[ Linked Image ]
Are there illustrations of what might be mail strips on the arms? The only contenders we have so far are on the legs.
Mail strips on arms,Tudor England.

http://myArmoury.com/talk/download.php?id=11230
Okay.....I've seen the Durer illustration before. I guess it just never clicked with me that those were strips of mail. I always just saw it as decoration on the hosen. That kinda takes the term--light armor--into a new reality. This may be something I attempt to recreate, just for fun. :) .....McM
Dan Howard wrote:
Are there illustrations of what might be mail strips on the arms? The only contenders we have so far are on the legs.


It looks to me the top image in Mart Shearer's post shows strips on the arms and torso sides on the fellow getting chibbed in the gut. I can't tell for sure, though.

I've browsed through the battle scenes I remember in the Luzerner Chronik and can't find any mail strips at all, despite showing a fair few hauberks! Nor in Ucello's paintings or Urs Graf's illustrations.
[ Linked Image ]
Adoration of the Magi, tapestry woven in Brussels, circa 1476-1488 (Sens Cathedral, France).
Source: https://i.pinimg.com/564x/b4/2c/f4/b42cf44bbf84004f0d8612f3ac87dbb1.jpg

His lighter harness apparently has the same cerimonial conotation than São Vicente's panels. The style of the chains are somehow unique: mail stripes for upper arms and horizontal plates for lower ones.
Yep. Looks like a good example. What are the chances of a museum having an extant garment with this kind of protection still intact?
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