Shields

The shield is the oldest and most universal armor form — a handheld or body-mounted barrier interposed between the user and incoming attacks. From prehistoric wicker and hide shields through Greek bronze aspis, Roman scutum, Viking round shield, and medieval heater shield, the shield shaped infantry tactics for millennia.

Shields

Armor — Subcategory

Overview

The shield is a handheld or body-mounted barrier used to intercept and deflect incoming attacks. It is the oldest and most universal defensive tool in human history — every culture that fought, from prehistoric hunter-gatherers to 19th-century African warriors, produced some form of shield. Unlike armor worn on the body, the shield is an active defensive tool: the user moves it to intercept attacks, creating a mobile barrier that can also be used offensively (pushing into opponents, bashing, trapping weapons).

Materials

Shields have been constructed from nearly every available material:

  • Wood — The most universal material; planks, wicker, or carved solid wood; covered with hide or linen; core of most ancient and medieval shields
  • Hide/leather — Often the primary or covering material; hardened (cuir bouilli) leather was surprisingly rigid
  • Wicker — Light; quick to make; arrows could stick in it (slowing penetration)
  • Bronze — Facing or entire construction; expensive; the bronze aspis
  • Iron/steel — Facing plates or full metal construction; heavy; primarily boss and rim elements rather than full panels
  • Modern ballistic materials — Polycarbonate, Kevlar, UHMWPE; ballistic shields for law enforcement

Ancient Shields

Mycenaean Tower Shield

  • Full-body length; oval; covered the entire figure
  • Depicted in Mycenaean frescoes and Homer
  • Required a leather baldric slung over the shoulder to carry; very heavy

Mycenaean Figure-8 Shield

  • Waisted in the middle; the iconic Mycenaean form
  • Depicted throughout Minoan and Mycenaean art

Greek Aspis (Hoplon)

  • Circular; 80–100 cm diameter; heavy (6–8 kg)
  • Bronze facing over a wood core; concave inner surface
  • The distinctive offset grip — the arm through a bronze arm band (porpax) at the center, hand gripping a cord at the rim — distributed weight and allowed one-handed use
  • The overlapping aspis of the phalanx created a shield wall; retreating meant exposing the unshielded right side of the man to the left — the origin of "come back with your shield, or on it"

Roman Scutum

  • Large rectangular (later oval) curved shield; 60×130 cm
  • Laminated plywood construction with leather facing and iron boss
  • The curve wrapped around the body; combined with the gladius, the system was: push the scutum into the enemy, thrust the gladius over, under, or around it

Medieval Shields

Kite Shield

  • Teardrop-shaped; pointed bottom protecting the leg; upper section covering the torso and face
  • Standard Norman shield at Hastings (1066) and through the 12th century
  • Evolved from the older round shield with added lower protection for cavalry

Heater Shield

  • Smaller; flat top, pointed bottom; heraldic device painted on it
  • The iconic medieval knight's shield; "heater" from its iron shape resemblance to a clothes iron
  • Carried on the left arm; right arm free for sword or lance

Viking Round Shield

  • Circular; 75–90 cm; wooden planks with iron boss covering the grip
  • Used in the shield wall (skjaldborg); overlapping shields created a continuous barrier

Targe

  • Scottish round shield; Highland warriors
  • Small (45–60 cm); leather-faced wood with iron boss and spikes
  • Used with the broadsword in the Highland charge; held in the left hand, broadsword in the right

Shield Walls

The shield wall was the primary tactical formation of many cultures:

  • Anglo-Saxon fyrd; Norse; Greek phalanx (aspis overlapping)
  • Overlapping shields created a nearly impenetrable barrier frontally
  • The challenge was always the flanks — shield walls could be enveloped

Decline

Shields declined as:

  1. Firearms made handheld shields irrelevant (a shield cannot stop a musket ball)
  2. Two-handed weapons required both hands
  3. Plate armor made the left hand available for a two-handed longsword grip

Modern police and military ballistic shields revived the concept for specific environments.


This article is a stub. Contributions covering specific shield types, tactics, and cultures are welcome.

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