habergeon
21Haubergeon — Hau*ber ge*on (h[add]*b[ e]r j[ e]*[o^]n), n. See {Habergeon}. [1913 Webster] …
22Martin Burgess — Edward Martin Burgess FSA FBHI, born 21 November 1931, known as Martin Burgess, is an English horologist and master clockmaker. Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2.1 Notable clocks …
23Cotte De Mailles Annulaire — Cotte de mailles exposée au château de Chillon Une cotte de mailles annulaire est un équipement défensif constitué d un assemblage d anneaux métalliques (fer, acier, bronze, cuivre,...). Cet équipement a pour but de protéger son porteur des coups …
24Cotte de mailles annulaire — Cotte de mailles exposée au château de Chillon Une cotte de mailles annulaire est un équipement défensif constitué d un assemblage d anneaux métalliques (fer, acier, bronze, cuivre,...). Cet équipement a pour but de protéger son porteur des coups …
25kʷel- — I. kʷel 1 Also kʷelə . To revolve, move around, sojourn, dwell. Derivatives include colony, cult, wheel, cyclone, pulley, and bucolic. I. Basic form *kʷel . colony …
26hauberk — noun A coat of mail; especially, the long coat of mail of the European Middle Ages, as contrasted with the habergeon, which is shorter and sometimes sleeveless. The hauberk was a complete covering of mail from head to foot. It consisted of a hood …
27Maurice Russell, knight — Sir Maurice Russell, a typecast not a portrait, displays the serious and dignified mien expected of the mediaeval knight, as for example portrayed in Chaucer s Canterbury Tales. Detail from Dyrham brass …
28Martin Burgess — Edward Martin Burgess (* 21. November 1931) ist ein zeitgenössischer englischer Meisteruhrmacher. Er wurde bekannt durch die Konstruktion von monumentalen Räderuhren. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben und uhrmacherische Leistung 2 Ehrungen 3 Uhren …
29Armour — Is employed in the English Bible to denote military equipment, both offensive and defensive. 1) The offensive weapons were different at different periods of history. The rod of iron (Ps. 2:9) is supposed to mean a mace or crowbar, an… …
30Brigandine — (Jer. 46:4; 51:3), an obsolete English word denoting a scale coat of armour, or habergeon, worn by light armed brigands. The Revised Version has coat of mail …