Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
By the late 15th century, the aventail had replaced the mail coif completely.
The chain aventail could have a decorative cloth cover.
A mail collar hanging from a helmet is a camail or aventail.
Spangenhelms may incorporate mail as neck protection, thus forming a partial aventail.
The open-faced bascinet, even with the mail aventail, still left the exposed face vulnerable.
They wore helmets with aventail and latten plate armour over padded shirts.
Vervelles are small metal staples used in Medieval armour to attach an aventail to a helmet.
The protocol was developed in collaboration with Aventail Corporation, which markets the technology outside of Asia.
The earlier armet often had a small aventail, a piece of mail attached to the bottom edge of each cheek-piece.
The bascinet had a mail curtain attached, a camail or aventail, which superseded the coif.
A mail curtain ("camail" or aventail) was usually attached to the lower edge of the helmet to protect the throat, neck and shoulders.
In essence the earliest sallets were a variant of the bascinet, intended to be worn without an aventail or visor.
The bretache was attached to the aventail at the chin, and it fastened to a hook or clamp on the brow of the helmet.
Mail was commonly used to protect the face, neck and cheeks either as an aventail from the helmet or as a mail coif.
Uncomfortable great helms went out of use, replaced with first visored bascinets, typically fitted with an aventail and hinged visor.
A Viking Era helmet with aventail and a single fragmented but possibly complete mail shirt have been excavated at the Gjermundbu farm.
The helmet was often complemented by chain mail, either as just an aventail to protect the neck and elbows or as a mask concealing the wearer's face.
He had a high, conical helm, apparently of silver, with an aventail of tiny silver links suspended from staples round the lower edge of the helm.
However, a graffito from the Roman frontier fortress of Dura Europos shows a cataphract wearing a conical helmet with a face-covering mail aventail.
As with all bascinets, the helmet generally had attachment points for armour to protect the neck and upper body, initially an aventail of mail and, later, plate armour.
The aventail was attached to a leather band, which was in turn attached to the lower border of the bascinet by a series of staples called "vervelles".
Helmet: the helmet varied by region and time but was generally a simple, conical-shaped piece of steel, often with extra neck protection in the form of a mail or leather aventail.
A branded version of it is also sold by SonicWALL as "SonicWALL Aventail Advanced Reporting".
Early gorgets were wide, copying the shape of the earlier aventail, however, with the narrowing of the neck opening the gorget plates had to be hinged to allow them to be put on.