The Medieval Knight
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About this ebook
The 'knight in shining armour' has become a staple figure in popular culture, and images of bloody battlefields, bustling feasting halls and courtly tournaments have been creatively interpreted many times in film and fiction. But what was the medieval knight truly like?
In this fascinating title, former Senior Curator at the Royal Armouries Christopher Gravett describes how knights evolved over three centuries of English and European history, the wars they fought, their lives both in peacetime and on campaign, the weapons they fought with, the armour and clothing they wore and their fascinating code and mythology of chivalry.
The text is richly illustrated with images ranging from manuscript illustrations to modern artwork reconstructions and many photographs of historic artefacts and sites.
Christopher Gravett
Christopher Gravett is a former Senior Curator at the Royal Armouries, Tower of London, and a recognized authority on the arms, armour and warfare of the medieval world. He has worked as an advisor for numerous TV and film productions, and has written several books, including DK Eyewitness Knight and Castle and more than 20 titles for Osprey.
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The Medieval Knight - Christopher Gravett
CONTENTS
CHRONOLOGY
INTRODUCTION
ORGANIZATION
TRAINING
ARMOUR AND WEAPONS
THE CHIVALRIC KNIGHT
THE KNIGHT ON CAMPAIGN AND IN BATTLE
THE END OF THE KNIGHT
BIBLIOGRAPHY
CHRONOLOGY
The impression in wax of the early 13th-century seal of Robert FitzWalter, showing what appears to be a padded testier on the horse’s head and neck. (Granger, NYC/TopFoto)
MEDIEVAL MONARCHS, 1199–1500
The late 13th-century wooden effigy of Robert of Gloucester in Gloucester Cathedral. His knees are protected by padded (gamboised) cuisses. (Angelo Hornak/Alamy)
Tiles of about 1255–60, from Chertsey Abbey in Surrey, depicting Richard I jousting against Saladin. Note the crown around Richard’s helm. (Ann Ronan Pictures/Print Collector/Getty Images)
INTRODUCTION
A possibly English plaque of around 1300 in the form of a charging knight. His helm is adorned with an antler crest, which is repeated on the head of his caparisoned warhorse. He wears ailettes (flat pieces of wood, leather or parchment, that would have been decorated with his coat-of-arms) on his shoulders and his sword is acutely pointed to burst through mail links. (Metropolitan Museum, New York/Public Domain)
The years between 1200 and 1500 saw the flowering of the chivalrous knight, before his ultimate demise in the century that followed. It is the period that embraced both the ideals of chivalry as we think of them today and also the image of the knight in shining armour. Early knights were basically fighting men, but during the 12th century this attitude had been somewhat compromised and the modification of ‘chivalry’ from being a word simply denoting horsemanship, to include the attitude of respect for women and protection of the church and the weak – however idealistic – was under way. The church had for centuries attempted to rein in the knightly predilection to fight; now it used its influence to direct knightly aggression to its own ends in the crusades. Apart perhaps from the Third Crusade in which Richard I (the Lionheart) had been a leader, England had not notably participated in these adventures. In the 12th century, the cult of the Virgin Mary saw a great upsurge in popularity, especially in France, partly because of the writings of theologians such as Bernard of Clairvaux. At the same time the south of France had spawned the troubadours, who sang of unrequited love for high-born ladies. Such sentiments slowly moved north to the slightly less sentimental trouvères, being also adapted by the minnesingers in the German lands. There also arose the great romances of literature, with the magical tales of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table being especially popular in England.
Thus, as the 13th century began, English knights were embracing a more civilized regime than perhaps did those who had crossed the sea with William the Conqueror in 1066. Many who had fought under William and been rewarded with estates were joined later by other men who had come over in the wake of the Conquest, eager to find new opportunities in England. Their language was generally French, the language of chivalry; English was the tongue of the conquered, yet it had persisted because of the large number of natives who continued to speak it. English nannies, servants and stewards passed it on as they communicated with their new masters on their country estates, where other French speakers would often be limited in number. Already in the 12th century, Benedictine monk and chronicler Orderic Vitalis had noticed that, among freemen, it was difficult to tell French from English in the conquered land. Essentially, as early as Stephen’s reign (1135–54), the struggles between the king and Empress Matilda had meant knights had to choose whether to base themselves and their holdings in England or Normandy; the loss of the latter to the French king in 1204 had accelerated such decisions. Growing up in England, the knights were increasingly more likely to acquire French than to have it as their first language. By the end of the century, Edward I could charge the King of France with threatening ‘to wipe out the English tongue’. As the French spoken in England began to decline in quality, the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453) sealed its doom as the main tongue of English lords.
The effigy of William Longespée in Salisbury Cathedral, dated around 1230–40, is the earliest surviving English military effigy, though restored in the 19th century. Note the lace threaded through the mail links to keep the coif in place; the shape of the latter suggests a padded arming cap beneath designed for a helm. (TopFoto)
This romanticized depiction of the effigy of Sir Richard Vernon (d.1451) in Tong church, Shropshire, demonstrates the abiding interest in chivalry in the 19th century. The figure shows the transition of armour from mail to full plate and includes a richly jewelled cloth orle circling his basinet, while his head reclines on his crested jousting helm. (Culture Club/Getty Images)
Despite the change in language among knights in England, their very status would form a bond between such warriors from all over Europe, men who shared the same sort of privileged existence, who understood chivalry, armour, weapons and horses, who had learned poetry, romances and good manners, had coats-of-arms and took part in tournaments. They knew they were set apart from others, yet English knighthood was not as elitist as, for example, the French equivalent. At the great battles of the 14th and 15th centuries, dismounted knights stood side by side with free-born longbowmen. Their society was dissimilar from that in German lands where initially there were still serf knights called ministeriales; it differed too from that in Italy, with its long tradition of urban centres harking back to the Roman past, where knights were more relegated to the countryside. English knights took their place in the shire courts and, during the 13th century, in the new parliament in London. Occasionally men from very different backgrounds became knights. Some individuals clever enough to obtain positions in the government or in trade, including some from free peasant backgrounds, attained enough status to be knighted. As the emphasis changed from landed to monetary wealth in the 15th century, so more people were able to enter the ranks of chivalry.
It would be wrong to suppose that England teemed with knights: compared to the population as a whole, or indeed to the other soldiers in any army, their numbers were usually small. The 5,000 of suitable rank under Henry II (1154–89) had shrunk to about 1,500 by 1300. Knights served in various ways. The feudal system had come to England with the Norman conquerors, hand in hand with the castle and knighthood. Forty days’ service to the king or lord each year, in return for land, formed one aspect of the system but some knights also served in their master’s households where necessary, being fed and sheltered by him in return for immediate service. The 13th century saw all this begin to change in England with the appearance of contracts, an answer to the problem of providing professional armies to fight abroad; during the next century this became usual.
There were plenty of opportunities to fight in order to gain ransoms and win renown. The struggle between King John and his barons, then between Henry III and Simon de Montfort, provided work for the knight during the 13th century. Henry’s son, Edward I, waged war against the Welsh, followed by the Scots. As the century turned, victories were won north of the border, but a great defeat was suffered at Bannockburn in 1314 under Edward II. When order was restored under his son, Edward III, English knights found themselves entering the Hundred Years’ War, at first winning great victories alongside their archers in France and even Spain. Gradually the French changed their strategy and the victories dried up until, following the English defeat at Castillon in 1453, English forces left France. They would return in the next century under the Tudors, with varying but frequently short-lived success. Meanwhile the knights fell upon one another at home in the Wars of the Roses, where ransoms were often forgotten as families settled old scores, only ending in 1485 when Henry Tudor took the crown after Bosworth.
Fully armed for war, the knight of 1500 was far removed from his predecessor of 1200. The interlinked mail that covered a man from head to toe was gradually replaced during the age of transition – the 14th century – so that by the dawning of the 15th century the knight in shining armour of plates had emerged, his armour designed to furnish a hard, glancing surface against arrows, weapon edges and points. Further fine-tuning of designs would see national styles develop as great centres arose to furnish harnesses of