Armor
Armor is protective equipment worn in battle to reduce or prevent injury — from prehistoric hide and wooden shields through bronze and iron plate, chainmail, and modern ballistic armor. Every offensive weapon innovation has driven defensive armor innovation in response.
Armor
Category Overview
Overview
Armor is protective equipment worn by combatants to reduce injury from weapons. It represents the defensive side of the eternal arms race between offense and defense — every improvement in weapons has driven improvement in armor, and vice versa. From animal-hide garments and wicker shields to modern ceramic plate carriers, armor has been a constant element of military equipment across all cultures.
The Arms Race
The history of armor is inseparable from the history of weapons:
| Offensive Innovation | Armor Response | |---------------------|---------------| | Bronze sword | Bronze helmet and shield | | Iron sword | Iron plate and mail | | Crossbow | Plate armor | | Longbow | Thicker plate; angled surfaces | | Musket | Plate abandoned; speed prioritized | | Rifle | Fieldworks; dispersal | | Machine gun | Steel helmet; body armor | | Modern firearms | Ceramic/composite ballistic plate |
Major Subcategories
- Helmets — Head protection; among the most universally adopted armor items across all cultures. See: Helmets.
- Body Armor — Torso and limb protection; from leather and linen through chainmail, plate, and modern ballistic vests. See: Body Armor.
- Shields — Handheld or fixed barriers; the oldest and most universal armor form. See: Shields.
Materials History
- Organic — Leather, layered linen, quilted fabric; cheap; provided surprising protection; limited to low-velocity impacts
- Bronze — First metal armor; excellent protection; expensive
- Iron/Steel — Progressively replaced bronze; chainmail (flexible) and plate (rigid)
- Modern — Steel, aluminum, Kevlar, UHMWPE, ceramic composites; protection against firearms
This article is a stub. Contributions covering specific armor types, cultures, and materials are welcome.
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