Age of Chivalry
The Age of Chivalry (c. 1000–1500) saw the development of full plate armor and the knight as the dominant military force in Western Europe, along with the arms and culture that surrounded mounted warfare — until the longbow, crossbow, and pike ended the armored knight's supremacy.
Age of Chivalry
c. 1000 – 1500
Overview
The Age of Chivalry spans the high medieval period — from the consolidation of feudalism and the emergence of the mounted knight as Europe's dominant military force, to the demise of that dominance in the face of the longbow, crossbow, and pike. It is the era of the Crusades, heraldry, jousting, and the progressive development of armor from chainmail to full plate — a 500-year arms race between offensive and defensive technology.
The Knight and His Arms
The medieval knight was an armored cavalry warrior — the most expensive, training-intensive, and individually lethal soldier of his era. A full war equipment represented roughly the value of a small farm.
The Sword
The knightly sword evolved significantly across the period:
- Early medieval (Carolingian type, 900–1100) — Pattern-welded or monosteel; broad, relatively flat; wide fuller; pommel; designed for cutting against lightly armored opponents
- High medieval (1100–1300) — Narrower point; longer grip allowing two-hand use; cross-shaped guard; as chainmail improved, swords needed to thrust into gaps
- Late medieval (1300–1500) — With plate armor, the war sword (bastard/hand-and-a-half sword) and longsword developed; longer, stiffer blades; acute points for thrusting into armor gaps; half-swording (gripping the blade with a gauntleted hand for controlled thrusting) and murder stroke (using the hilt as a hammer against armored opponents) became standard fighting techniques
Notable types: estoc (rigid armor-piercing sword), falchion (single-edged cutting sword), great sword (two-handed).
The Lance
The lance was the knight's primary offensive weapon:
- Used couched under the arm from the late 11th century onward — a revolutionary technique that transferred the horse's full momentum into the lance point
- An armored cavalry charge with couched lances was nearly unstoppable against infantry not in prepared positions
- Tournaments (jousting) reproduced this single combat; a couched lance hit could unhorse a fully armored opponent
Secondary Arms
- War hammer and mace — With plate armor, cutting weapons were less effective; blunt weapons transmitted impact through armor; the war hammer's spike could punch through plate
- Poleaxe — The preferred weapon of armored men fighting on foot; combined axe, hammer, and spike; designed specifically to defeat plate armor
- Dagger (misericorde) — "Mercy" dagger; slim-bladed; pushed through visor or joints to kill a downed armored opponent; the last resort in close combat
Armor Development
The central narrative of the Age of Chivalry is the arms race between weapon and armor:
Chainmail (c. 1000–1300)
- Hauberk — Full chainmail body garment; extended to mid-thigh with split skirts for riding; long sleeves; integrated coif (head covering) in many versions
- Chausses — Chainmail leg coverings
- Limitations — Chainmail stopped cuts but transmitted blunt trauma; crossbow bolts and bodkin-point arrows could penetrate at battle range; no protection against bludgeoning
Transitional Armor (1200–1350)
- Coat of plates — Iron plates riveted inside a fabric garment; provided rigid protection over chainmail
- Early plate additions — Knee caps (poleyns), elbow cops (couters), and arm plates (vambraces) added over chainmail
Full Plate Armor (1350–1500)
- Gothic armor (German) — Characterized by fluted surfaces that deflected weapons; elaborate articulation; full coverage from head to foot
- Milanese armor (Italian) — Rounded, smooth surfaces; extremely complete coverage; the finest production armor in Europe
- An armored knight in full plate was remarkably well-protected — A well-fitted harness could survive arrows, sword cuts, and even some firearms; defeating a knight required targeting the gaps at armpits, groin, and visor, or using specialized weapons (poleaxe, rondel dagger)
- Weight — A full plate harness weighed 15–25 kg; roughly equal to a modern soldier's combat load; distributed across the body, it was more manageable than popularly imagined
The End of Chivalry's Military Dominance
Three weapons ended the knight's supremacy:
The Longbow (1300s)
At Crécy (1346), Poitiers (1356), and Agincourt (1415), English and Welsh longbowmen destroyed French cavalry charges. A skilled longbowman fired 10–12 arrows per minute; a massed volley from hundreds of archers saturated an area with enough arrow density to hit horses (which could not be fully armored) and penetrate chainmail at the flanks.
The Crossbow (1000–1400s)
The crossbow democratized ranged anti-armor capability — requiring little training, it could penetrate chainmail at combat range. The Church attempted to ban it (Second Lateran Council, 1139) as an unchivalrous weapon; this reflected its threat to the knightly class.
The Pike and Halberd (1300s–1400s)
Swiss and Flemish infantry using pike formations and halberds defeated armored cavalry at Morgarten (1315), Laupen (1339), and Grandson (1476). A disciplined phalanx of pikemen presented an impenetrable wall of points that cavalry could not overrun; halberds pulled knights from horses.
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