A beautiful example of Early Ottoman mail and plate body armour. The armour consists of chain link shirt, neck defence and short skirt. The breast of the warrior was protected...
A beautiful example of Early Ottoman mail and plate body armour. The armour consists of chain link shirt, neck defence and short skirt. The breast of the warrior was protected by two solid plates, fastened together by three decorated buckles. The back of the armour displays a set of long horizontal plates embedded in mail and resembling laminar armour, which gave some agility and ease of movement to the warrior.
Mail and plate armours are well attested in Middle Eastern cultures, and were imported by the Golden Horde.
The Ottoman Empire was founded by Osman I. As sultan Mehmed II conquered Constantinople in 1453, the state grew into a mighty empire. The Empire reached its apex under Suleiman the Magnificent in the 16th century when it stretched from the Persian Gulf in the east to Hungary in the northwest; and from Egypt in the south to the Caucasus in the north. The empire came to an end in the aftermath of its defeat by the Allies in World War I. The empire, which was much reduced over the centuries, both politically and geographically, and was finally dismantled by the Allies after the 1st World War ended in 1918.