Well, and its coverage - along with scale - is just better. The segmentata offers no protection for the upper legs or groin - those are areas where a cut or puncture can lead to lethal blood-loss quite fast! Scale and mail cover those areas in most of their forms.
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The coverage difference is, I think, why I am less shocked then some that this 'advanced' armor-type doesn't continue into the later periods, especially since it doesn't seem to have been worn with mail. It's just not a proto-brigandine.
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What always baffles me is why it shows up in the west but not the east. If you asked me where I'd expected to see rigid, layered plate defense first, I'd have said the East, against more powerful bows. Obviously not!
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I wonder if we're actually overthinking it, and it shows up in the west because that's where the local iron production included methods of producing lots of relatively cheap sheet-iron and this was a cost-saving measure for the less dangerous frontiers.
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Vastauksena käyttäjille @Idiotprofessor4 ja @MilHist_Lee
What do you think, if you have a view, of Sim and Kaminski's argument about sheet metal production - that the relatively uniform metal sheets used in the examples we have would have demanded the use of rollers to produce the sheet iron?
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Vastauksena käyttäjille @Idiotprofessor4 ja @MilHist_Lee
Makes me wonder if that method of sheet metal production was a regional technology, which might explain why the segmentata shows such a regional bias. It would fit with the trend of generally better Gallic iron-working
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What I actually find the most puzzling about the Roman armor system is that it is always 1 textile layer + 1 metal layer. Contra D'Amato, evidence for pure textile armor is infrequent. But also I can't think of any representation of scale or segmata being worn over mail.
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It seems like an obvious thing and of course is extremely common in the back half of the Middle Ages, but the Romans just...don't. I rather have to assume they thought the protection of a single layer was sufficient.
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