Jump to content

Cuisses

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromCuisse)
Italian cuisse, circa 1450

Cuisses(/kwɪs/;/kwis/;French:[kɥis]) are a form ofmedievalarmourworn to protect the thigh.[1]The word is the plural of theFrenchwordcuissemeaning 'thigh'. While the skirt of amailleshirt ortassetsof acuirasscould protect the upper legs from above, a thrust from below could avoid these defenses. Thus, cuisses were worn on the thighs to protect from such blows. Padded cuisses made in a similar way to agambesonwere commonly worn by knights in the 12th and 13th centuries, usually overchausses,and may have hadpoleynsdirectly attached to them. Whilst continental armours tended to have cuisses that did not protect the back of the thigh, English cuisses were typically entirely encapsulating, due to the English preference for foot combat over the mounted cavalry charges favoured by continental armies.

Cuisses could also be made ofbrigandineor splinted leather, but beginning around 1340 they were typically made fromsteelplate armour.[2]From 1370 onward they were made from a single plate ofironor steel.[2]

Ancient Greece

[edit]

Perimeridia(Ancient Greek:περιμηρίδια) andParameridia(παραμηρίδια) were metal armour for covering the thighs.[3]Though not in common use in the ordinary Greekpanoply,are shown sufficiently often on the monuments and vase-paintings as occasionally employed by Greek warriors at least as far back as the fifth century B.C. They are frequently mentioned by Greek writers, of the third century B.C. and downwards, but here almost exclusively as employed by cavalry, both for the rider and his horse (in addition, some writers call the protective armour of the horseparapleuridia(παραπλευρίδια), while others makes a further distinction of παραπλευρίδια for horses driven in chariots and παραμηρίδια for those ridden by the cavalry).[4][5]

Citations

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • Smith, R. (2010). Rogers, Clifford J. (ed.).The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology: Volume I.Oxford: Oxford University Press.ISBN978-0195334036.