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The Armoury
War | Women
in War | Heraldry | Joan
of Arc
WAR
An army was not the safest place to be during the
Middle Ages. Being a knight required immense strength and endurance. Knights
were well-protected by their armour, but protection came with a price. Armour
alone could weigh half as much again as the knight. During the Crusades,
European armour became an oven. Many knights died from heat stroke and
dehydration. Weapons were unwieldy and could inflict great damage. Horrible
wounds were often infected because of unsanitary conditions and poor medical
care -- army surgeons were not usually of the university calibre. A shattered
bone might heal, but the wounded soldier might be crippled for life.
As the
knight rose to prominence in armies, the foot soldier was increasingly despised
for his (or her) inadequacies -- namely deficiencies in training and experience.
It didn't help matters that foot soldiers were usually insufficiently armoured
(in leather jerkins) and encumbered with weapons like pikes, which could do a
lot of damage but only if used by extremely well-trained companies.
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Women
in War
Despite the stereotype of medieval
women which persists to modern times, not all of them were docile, subservient,
and brainless. The last place most people would expect to find a medieval woman
making a living is in the armed forces of her country. It is true that the
majority of soldiers were men. However, it is also true that women fighters were
included in the ranks of many mercenary and national armies. Before the Romanisation
of Britain, the matriarchies often employed entire companies of female warriors.
They were greatly feared because they appeared to have lost their natural
maternal and loving instincts . Both men and women were expected to help defend
a town or a castle, should it be attacked. When the men of a town were away
fighting, the women were expected to take care of business at home
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Heraldry is the study of armorial bearings
-- the insignia of a noble house. The formal heraldic tradition, crafted for
identification and display, began in the mid-twelfth century. A lord's soldiers
needed to be able to identify him -- and the enemy -- in battle. When the
earliest rolls (records) of arms were written, a language called blazon was used
to describe the arrangement of geometry, colours, and insignia.
Highly
formalized and complex, the shield design was actually sort of a secret code
which could make a pun on a knight's name, give a nod to his accomplishments,
personify his characteristics, or even denote his illegitimacy. For men, the
base of a coat of arms is the familiar shield shape; for women, the lozenge or
diamond shape. Women did not have arms in their own right. Unmarried women bore
their father's arms on a lozenge. Married women combine their husbands' and
fathers' arms on a shield.
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Joan
of Arc is probably the best known medieval woman warrior. Our
familiarity with her comes from the miracles associated with her
and also from the injustice of her death. She was not the only
woman ever to join a medieval army, however, so click on the
picture to find out more about her and her contemporaries.
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Adapted with permission of Dominion
and Domination
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