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Armour from the Battle of Wisby, 1361 (New ed)

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On a hot July day in 1361, 1,300 poorly armed men stood their ground to defend their city of Wisby against the pressure of King Waldemar.

Unfortunately, the defenders were slaughtered. It was three days before the besieged city capitulated and the defenders were finally able to come out to bury the dead.

Putrifying in the hot sun, pits were dug in the peat bogs and the bodies hurriedly cast in and buried.

In the 1920s, Bengt Thordeman and a team of archeologists excavated at the site of the burial and produced a work that has stood the test of time.The 900+ photographs and illustrations record in great detail the coat of plate cote armours, brigandine finger gauntlets, dress accessories and wound pathology for many of the victims.

Reproduced for the first time since 1939 with a new introduction by 'Techniques of Medieval Armour Reproduction' author Brian R.

Price, this elegantly printed single volume version of the original 2 volumes is a must for any library on medieval knighthood, arms and armour, archeology or warfare.

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Product Details
Chivalry Bookshelf,US
1891448056 / 9781891448058
Hardback
623.441
15/11/2003
United States
English
xiii, 480 p., 145 p. of plates : ill.
29 cm
general /postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More