braconniere
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From French braconnière, from Middle French braconniere, bragonniere, from Old Italian braconi, from braca.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]braconniere (plural braconnieres)
- A skirt or apron of mail or lamellar armor, worn with plate armor, to defend the stomach, groin, and upper thighs.
- 1877, Auguste Demmin, An Illustrated History of Arms and Armour from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, London: G. Bell & sons, page 185:
- Danish warrior of the fourteenth century, whose armour is curious because of the braconniere or apron and loinguards in trellised work which partly cover the mailed hauberk.
- 2012, Kenneth Bulmer, The Key to Venudine: Keys to the Dimensions, Gateway, →ISBN:
- The true blade Peaceful snouted up and seared through the first knight's mail deep into his groin. […] The man collapsed in a clattering uproar of metal clashing against metal. Trouble with a full suit of plate, even today and as far as armorers like Master Gyron had gone, was that betraying section of mail braconniere.
- 2018, Philip Nowlan, The Prince of Mars Returns, Jovian Press, →ISBN:
- Underneath was a broad girdle of heavy leather and metal plates, from which hung thigh guards and a kind of braconniere, a kilt of chain mail.
Translations
[edit]Translations
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Further reading
[edit]- S.R. Meyrick (1842) A Critical Inquiry Into Antient Armour, as it Existed in Europe, Particularly in Great Britain, from the Norman Conquest to the Reign of King Charles II: Ill. by a Series of Illuminated Engravings : with a Glossary of Military Terms of the Middle Ages, page 145: “BRACONNIERE. A petticoat of overlapping lames of steel, worn in the time of Henry VIII.”