Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Roman Cavalry Helmets

A selection of the weird "parade helmets" worn by some Roman cavalry from the first to fourth century CE. I find these fascinating because they are so contrary to my vision of what the Roman army was like. This makes me wonder what else I am getting wrong.


Above and top is the Crosby-Garret helmet, one of the most complete specimens. This was found by a metal detectorist in Britain about ten years ago and sold for more than £3 million.




These four were dredged from rivers in the Low Countries and are now in Dutch museums. The third one down shows you clearly that the face mask and helmet were separate pieces, hinged together. Most surviving examples are bronze (like many other Roman helmets), a few iron or brass; some are silvered and some were even decorated with gems.

Opinions differ as to whether these were just for show or were actually worn in combat. Some people call them "parade helmets," which tells you what they think. But this mask was found at the battlefield of Kalkriese, which seems to the site of the great battle of Teutoburger Wald. So at least one person wore one on campaign. To provide good vision and breathing the mask has to fit precisely, which suggests that they were custom made.


The Homs Helmet, from the Syrian desert, preserving even the cloth top. Imagine a whole troop of men riding by, wearing these. It must have been an eerie sight. Or were they just worn by officers?

Several surviving examples have women's faces with elaborate hairstyles. What was that about?


The Ribchester Helmet.

One from Istanbul.




Fragments.

1 comment:

G. Verloren said...

"I find these fascinating because they are so contrary to my vision of what the Roman army was like. This makes me wonder what else I am getting wrong."

I imagine a huge part of why the average person's perceptions of the Roman army are skewed is the massive influence of Hollywood.

"To provide good vision and breathing the mask has to fit precisely, which suggests that they were custom made."

"Imagine a whole troop of men riding by, wearing these. It must have been an eerie sight. Or were they just worn by officers?"


Historically almost all armor fell into two categories - basic mass produced armor provided for the conscripted troops, and then the personally purchased and customized armor of the dedicated warrior elites.

Grunts got cheap, roughly made stuff that wasn't pretty but worked, typically just enough to cover the vitals of the torso, abdomen, and upper legs, then topped off with a crude helmet. Roman legionnaires had pretty solid stuff compared to a lot of other ancient soldiers, but it was still no-frills, economical gear.

Facial armor was certainly more of a luxury that would have been privately comissioned, because it was harder and more expensive to make. Most troops lucky enough to afford the additional protection probably were officers and men of higher social status.