Showing posts with label armour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label armour. Show all posts

29 September 2024

Brigandine armours of the Ming Dynasty (Revised 2024)

Introduction of brigandine to China

It is generally accepted that Chinese armies adopted brigandine armour due to Mongol influence, although curiously this appears to have occurred only after the fall of the Mongol-ruled Yuan Dynasty. To elaborate, there are very few records suggesting that the Yuan army made use of brigandine armour at all, and most 'evidence' seems to stem from Qing- and Joseon-era brigandines in Japan’s Mongolian Invasion Historical Museum being erroneously attributed to the Yuan period. Moreover, written records and a few armour finds from the early Ming period also indicate that the early Ming army was still predominantly equipped with lamellar armour.

The earliest written record that explicitly mentions brigandine armour comes from an armour regulation found in the Collected Statutes of the Ming Dynasty (《大明會典》), dated to the ninth year of the reign of the Hongzhi Emperor (1496 A.D.). However, the wording of the statute suggests that brigandine armour was already known in China for some time—albeit probably only in the not-too-distant past.

Ming soldiers wearing brigandines, from 'Zhen Wu Ling Ying Tu Ce (《真武靈應圖冊》)'.
Another possible piece of evidence for early Ming brigandine comes from its depictions in Zhen Wu Ling Ying Tu Ce (《真武靈應圖冊》), a collection of Daoist painted scrolls. Historians remain undecided on whether this scroll collection should be dated to the reign of the Yongle Emperor (i.e. early 15th century) or to the twilight years of the Ming Dynasty (i.e. 17th century). Nevertheless, since it is known that Ming brigandine underwent significant style changes during the Ming–Qing transition period, yet the armours depicted here do not reflect those changes, an earlier date is more likely to be the correct one.

Thus, given the available evidence, at best an informed guess can be made that brigandine armour was introduced to China some time in the fifteenth century.

Styles and designs of Ming brigandines

1. Brigandine coat

Many variations in designs found on Ming brigandines (click to enlarge).
A Ming brigandine was a suit of armour with iron (or low-carbon steel) plates fixed to a cloth cover from the inside using copper rivets. All Ming brigandines took the form of a loose-fitting, single-breasted coat that somewhat resembled a modern gilet, albeit with considerable variations in collar designs, sleeve designs, coat lengths, rivet patterns, and, of course, colours.

Ming infantry kitted in various types of brigandines.

Ming cavalry kitted in various types of brigandines.
Nearly all variations of Ming brigandines were used by infantry and cavalry alike, although naturally foot soldiers would have had different preferences and requirements from their mounted counterparts, causing some styles of brigandine to be more prevalent than others among certain troop types. Broadly speaking, for much of the Ming period foot soldiers preferred to wear short-sleeved, hip-length to knee-length armours alone, whereas mounted troops preferred sleeveless or cap-sleeved brigandines of either waist length or ankle length, often combined with additional armour items such as Bi Fu (臂縛) and armoured skirts.

1.1 Auxiliary armour

Common Ming period auxiliary armours of brigandine construction (click to enlarge).
Brigandine also replaced lamellar in the construction of various auxiliary armours during the Ming period. The most common brigandine auxiliary armour was the aventail of a helmet, which came in two main varieties: with or without separate cheek pieces. By the twilight years of the Ming Dynasty, brigandine throat guards, underarm protectors, and front armour attachments also came into widespread use, owing to the introduction of a new style of brigandine armour (see below).

There is also some pictorial evidence suggesting that the rectangular brigandine throat guard—of the type commonly associated with Qing armour—was actually already in use during the Ming period.

2. Composite armour

Ming cavalry kitted in composite brigandine armours.
A rarer form of Ming brigandine, seemingly reserved for mounted elite troops and guards, was the so-called 'composite armour'. It appeared to be a sleeveless, ankle-length brigandine coat reinforced with a different type of armour at the upper torso, which may have been of scale, lamellar, brigandine, or possibly mail construction. It remains unknown whether the upper-torso armour was directly integrated into the brigandine coat or was simply a separate partial armour worn over a common brigandine coat.

Various forms of armours in use during late Ming period, from 'Bing Lu (《兵錄》)'. Third and fourth armour from the left are composite brigandines.
The late Ming period military treatise Bing Lu (《兵錄》) also contains two illustrations of ankle-length composite brigandines. One depicts a brigandine coat with a lamellar skirt, while the other shows a lamellar coat with a brigandine skirt.

3. Late Ming period two-piece brigandine

Several Ming cavalry in two-piece brigandines, image cropped from 'Xing Jun Tu (《行軍圖》)', a late Ming copy of an earlier painting.
A new style of Ming brigandine largely supplanted (but likely did not completely phase out) older styles of armour during the twilight years of the Ming Dynasty. The new style consisted of a helmet with assorted brigandine aventail and a curved triangular throat guard, a sleeveless hip-length coat and an enlarged armoured skirt (often in mismatched colours), a pair of large underarm protectors, a square-shaped front armour attachment, as well as a pair of segmented Bi Fu armguards to make a whole set.

After the downfall of the Ming Dynasty, the ascendant Qing Dynasty inherited the armour design, and the style eventually evolved into the iconic Qing brigandine upon further modifications.

8 November 2022

Patreon post: Auxiliary armours of Qing brigandine

 

This is a companion article to my Japanese armour post post, exploring various lesser-known auxiliary armours of Qing brigandine. As of now, it is available to my patrons for one month early, but it is opened to public now!

The article can be accessed here. If you like my work, please support me via Patreon!

27 September 2022

Patreon post: Flaws and gaps of samurai armour

 

This article is a continuation of my previous armour comparison blog post, exploring various gaps and weakness of Japanese armour. The article is available to my patrons one month early, but it is open to public now!

The article can be accessed here. If you like my work, please support me via Patreon!

10 October 2017

Traditional Chinese and Byzantine armour components: A brief introduction and analysis

Chinese and Byzantine armour glossaries
Left: An unnamed commander or guard in Chinese-style "Cataphract" armour. Middle: Wu Dao Jiang Jun (五道將軍), one of the Chinese deities of afterlife. Right: Saint Nicetas the Goth, Christian martyr and military saint of the Russian Orthodox Church.

18 August 2016

Ming, Qing and Japanese armour components: A brief introduction and analysis

UPDATED NOVEMBER 10, 2022


Ming Qing Japanese Armour Glossaries
Left: An unnamed Ming Jin Yi Wei (錦衣衛, lit. 'Brocade-clad guard') in parade gear. Middle: Fu De (富德), a Manchu commander of Plain Yellow Banner. Right: Yamanaka Yukimori (山中幸盛) with his characteristic crescent moon crested helmet.
This blog post is intended to be an introductory article to Chinese armours of Ming and Qing period, their individual components, as well as a comparison between their similarities and differences. I also included a Japanese armour to the analysis in the hope that it can highlight the design considerations that went into each of these armours.

1 June 2016

Lamellar and scale armours of the Ming Dynasty

For most of China's history, lamellar armour and, to a much lesser extent, scale armour were the most widely used armour types in Chinese armies. The use of lamellar armour declined during Ming period, having given way to the more convenient yet no less protective brigandine. Nevertheless, it never disappeared completely from Chinese arsenal.

Generally speaking, there were several different styles of lamellar or scale armour in use during Ming period.

Traditional Song Dynasty-style "Ornate" Armour

Traditional Song Dynasty Ornate Armour
Section of an early Ming Dynasty religious scroll painting, depicting a Chinese commander in an ornate suit of composite armour. Shanxi Museum.
This type of armour was one of the most recognisable of Chinese armours, and was usually reserved for the highest ranking commanders and Jin Yi Wei (錦衣衛). It could be of either lamellar, scale, mountain pattern or even mail construction, or a composite of multiple types. As this type of armour was often ornamental in nature, it was usually made of bronze or gilded iron/steel. Field armour of this style also existed, but never common.

22 March 2015

Mail armour of the Ming Dynasty

Ming Chinese Hauberk
Mail armour, from 'Wu Bei Zhi (《武備志》)'.

20 March 2015

Cotton and brigandine armours of the Ming Dynasty

Mian Jia (棉甲, cotton armour)

Ming Chinese Gambeson
Section of one of the pages of 'Rui Xi Xian Sheng Nian Pu (《瑞溪先生年譜》)', depicting a horseman wearing a long coat with cross hatch quilting pattern, possibly a cotton armour.

21 February 2015

Bamboo and wooden armours of the Ming Dynasty

Bamboo armour

Chinese Bamboo Helmet
A Qing period bamboo hat helmet, probably used by the militia. (Source: Trocadero)
Ming army never made use of bamboo body armour, except very rarely as helmet. Nevertheless, one peculiar group did find the bamboo armour useful—warrior monks from Shaolin Monastery. Since warrior monks were often recruited to aid government efforts in combating Wokou (倭寇), so some form of protection must be necessary.

17 February 2015

Paper armours of the Ming Dynasty

Qi Jia (甲, lit. 'Quilted armour') and Zhi Bi Shou (紙臂手, paper armguard)

Chinese Paper Armor
Drawing of a Qi Jia, from 'Ji Xiao Xin Shu (《紀效新書》)'.
A helmet and a paper armguard, also from 'Ji Xiao Xin Shu (《紀效新書》)'.
Also known as Zhi Jia (紙甲, paper armour) and Ruan Jia (軟甲, soft armour), this armour was made of silk cloth stuffed with silk wadding and silk paper (paper made from silkworm cocoon) or normal paper to the thickness of one cun or more, then quilted with silk thread. It could be worn as standalone armour, or underneath leather armour. For all intents and purposes, Qi Jia was the Chinese equivalent of gambeson.

16 February 2015

Quan Tie Jia (全鐵甲), plate armour of the Ming Dynasty

UPDATED DECEMBER 1, 2023, minor update OCTOBER 11, 2024


Ming Dynasty Chinese plate armour
Quan Tie Jia (全鐵甲, lit. ‘Full iron armour’) was an interesting and one-of-a-kind Chinese armour design that first appeared during the tail end of the Ming Dynasty. Unlike brigandine and lamellar armour commonly used in China at the time, Quan Tie Jia was made of large overlapping steel plates, and was often seen as a late but independent attempt to develop plate armour.

27 November 2014

Leather (and other animal-derived) armours of the Ming Dynasty

Pi Jia (皮甲, leather armour or hide armour)

Ming Chinese Cowhide Scale Armour
Pi Jia, from 'Wu Bei Yao Lue (《武備要略》)'.

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