Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/western-plate-armour

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Rondel (armour)

Circular metal plate used on late-medieval armour

Rondel (armour)

Summary

Circular metal plate used on late-medieval armour

15th-century cuirass with shoulder-hung [[besagew]]s, [[Livrustkammaren]].

A rondel (French: rondelle; not to be confused with a vamplate, which was referred to by the same term) is a circular, disk-shaped plate of metal added to a harness of late-medieval plate armor to close structural gaps or to reinforce vulnerable straps and hinges. The rondel was also used in weapons as a handguard, in particular the rondel dagger but also in swords.

Historical development

The first rondels appeared in the late 14th century, soon after rigid cuirasses made of breastplates and backplates had replaced the earlier coat of plates. By the mid-15th century their use had spread throughout Europe until being phased out in field armour of the mid 16th century.

Typology and applications

Armpit defenses

Main article: Besagew

In late medieval and Renaissance armour the armpits were protected by besagews. These often took the form of plain, slightly convex rondels that hung from either the pauldron or the top edge of the gorget, covering the otherwise exposed gap at the arm's forward pivot. The plate was normally secured with a very short leather strap and buckle, with laces, or on some breastplates by a turning pin.

Head defenses

Armets often carried a small rondel, also called a volet, attached to the nape of the helmet's skull by a stem. This disk is believed to have protected the leather strap of the wrapper (a reinforce for the visor that preceded the buffe) and prevented an opponent from cutting it away, along with protecting the rear junction of the cheekpieces. Early close helmets, which often mimicked the style of the armet, also made use of rondels at the nape and occasionally at higher points of the skull of the helmet.

Rondels were also depicted in illuminated manuscripts being affixed to the sides of bascinets and sallets. Aventails were also sometimes depicted with rondels being affixed to them to cover the throat, much like a bevor.

Elbow disks

Some mid-14th-century armour employed a simple globular couter consisting of a rondel centred on the elbow joint. By the 15th century this form had largely been superseded by winged couters that wrapped around the joint.

Gauntlets

A ''main de fer'' type gauntlet with a rondel on the metacarpal

Small rondels occasionally strengthen the back of gauntlets, either brazed on or riveted through the glove lining, to stiffen the metacarpals and act as a stop for the tourney shield. The manifer (main de fer), a type of gauntlet that protected the left hand in the joust, employed the rondel as a reinforce.

Shaffrons

The shaffron, a forehead defense that formed part of the barding for a horse, sometimes featured a rondel in the midpoint between the horse's eyes where it was affixed with a spike on which it could rotate to dampen the impact of blows from blunt weapons. They were often ornate and formed part of the style of barding for nobility.

References

References

  1. (2025). "Pas d'armes and Late Medieval Chivalry: A Casebook". [[Liverpool University Press]].
  2. Pyhrr, Stuart W.. (2000). "European Helmets, 1450–1650". Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  3. Moffat, Ralph. (2022). "Medieval Arms and Armour: A Sourcebook, Volume I – The Fourteenth Century". [[Boydell & Brewer]].
  4. Blair, Claude. (1958). "European Armour 1066–1700". Batsford.
  5. Ffoulkes, Charles J.. (1926). "Inventory and Survey of the Armouries of the Tower of London". His Majesty's Stationery Office.
  6. Ffoulkes, Charles J.. (1926). "Inventory and Survey of the Armouries of the Tower of London". His Majesty's Stationery Office.
  7. "Armour Archive -- Essays".
  8. Dobson, Chris. (2024). "Art and Armour in the Western Alps: Milan, Savoy and ‘the French Style’ 1400–1500".
  9. Capwell, Tobias. (2012). "A Helmet in the Church of St Mary, Bury St. Edmunds".
  10. (1440). "Book of Hours, MS M.19 fol. 62v".
  11. "Manuscript Miniatures: Kreigsbuch".
  12. (c. 1440). "MS M.917/945, p. 38–f. 58r".
  13. Kirchhoff, Chassica. (2023). "The Thun-Hohenstein Album: Cultures of Remembrance in a Paper Armory". [[Boydell & Brewer]].
  14. Goll, Matthias. (2014). "Iron Documents: Interdisciplinary studies on the technology of late medieval European plate armour production between 1350 and 1500". Heidelberg University.
  15. (2020). "An Armour from a finery?—a late medieval couter from Ogrodzieniec Castle in the Kraków-Częstochowa Jura". Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences.
  16. "Mitten Gauntlet for Left Hand with Rondel (Manifer)". Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  17. (2024-02-26). "New light on the Warwick Shaffron: understanding horse and shaffron size through the collections of the Royal Armouries". Arms & Armour.
  18. Monte, Pietro. (2018). "Pietro Monte's Collectanea: The Arms, Armour and Fighting Techniques of a Fifteenth-Century Soldier". [[Boydell & Brewer]].
  19. "Shaffron - Shaffron - about 1612".
  20. "Rondel for a Shaffron (Horse's Head Defense)". Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Rondel (armour) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report