The Armor

Roman soldiers were the most professional and well equipped of their time. They trained for years and as a result, the Roman Legions were the greatest armies of their time. Also their equipment was extremely advanced compared to their competitors. Most of the tribes of the north like the Guals for example, wore leather armor. The Romans, however, wore iron and bronze armor composed of many light metal plates to allow flexibility, an iron helmet with bronze fittings for decoration, called a cassis, a large wooden shield covered with leather, called a scutum, leather sandals with metal studs on the sole, called caligae, and a leather belt decorated with small metal plates. This belt was called a cingulum. (Forman, 44)

The Weapons
pilum.jpg
Three pilums with different weighting mechanisms. Lighter spears could be thrown easily but heavier ones were better for close combat. ( La Wren’s Nest)

Roman weaponry was also much more advanced than their competitors. Roman weapons had a variety of types. The roman short sword, called a Gladius, had an iron blade with a bone handle. It is often referred to as the "sword that conquered the world," The javelins, called a pilum, had a thin iron neck and point with a wood handle. This design allowed the soldiers to throw their javelins and also double them as spears for closer range combat, unlike the wooden spears of the Germanic tribes of Europe. The pilum was the primary weapon and the gladius was used as backup. (PBS)


The Forts

Roman forts were also advanced and considerably defendable for their time. They consisted of scattered light wooden defenses around a main wall studded with towers at the corners and at intervals along the straights. In the center were the principia or the headquarters. Immediately surrounding that is the horrea, or granary, the Valetudinarium or hospital, the praetorium, or officer’s quarters, and the via principalis and via sagularis, which served as parade grounds and meeting places. Besides that, there were the infantry and cavalry barracks, which were separate structures. (Centre for Study of Ancient Documents, Oxford University)






gladius.jpg
Roman Gladius with Scabbard (Macdonald Armories)


Works Cited

  1. Forman, Joan. The Romans. Morristown, NJ: Silver Burdett Company, 1977
  2. "Warrior Challenge". PBS. December 3, 2008 <http://myron.sjsu.edu/romeweb/ROMARMY/ROMARMY.HTM>.
  3. Vindolanda Tablets Online | Exhibition | Army life | Fort plans". Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents, Academic Computing Development Team (Oxford University). December 3, 2008 <http://vindolanda.csad.ox.ac.uk/exhibition/army-1.shtml>.
  4. "Historical Arms by Macdonald Armories". Macdonald Academy of Arms. Dec 4, 2008 <http://www.historicalfencing.org/Macdonaldarmory/work.htm>.
  5. "La Wren's Nest (Weaponry)". La Wren's Nest. Dec 4, 2008 <http://www.lawrensnest.com/gladius.html>.

- d-murray d-murray Dec 4, 2008