14th Century Brigandine for buhurt and training

14th Century Brigandine for buhurt and training
14th Century Brigandine for buhurt and training
14th Century Brigandine for buhurt and training
14th Century Brigandine for buhurt and training
14th Century Brigandine for buhurt and training
14th Century Brigandine for buhurt and training
14th century brigandine for armored combat and training. Riveted construction with inner plates and a shell made from wool plus durable tarpaulin. The segmented build supports a practical balance of torso protection and mobility in clinch-heavy fighting. Service-friendly format: worn or damaged areas are typically easier to maintain than one-piece plate solutions. Works as a clear, straightforward torso option for beginners and a reliable base layer for experienced fighters.
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Product description

14th Century Brigandine is a torso armor piece for armored combat / buhurt, built around a textile shell with riveted internal plates. This construction spreads impact across the body while keeping the flexibility needed for weapon work, grappling, and fast direction changes.

The outer base uses wool with a durable tarpaulin layer; protection is provided by a set of inner plates fixed with rivets, creating the classic external rivet pattern. The design is based on historical analogues and iconographic sources of the 14th century—focused on period-correct principles and silhouette, without claiming absolute reconstruction.

Protection and mobility: a segmented plate layout is commonly chosen for full contact formats because it supports repeated hits on the torso while allowing bending and twisting that matter in close-range exchanges.

Fit: correct sizing and torso length are key for rib coverage and breathing room. Choose size based on measurements taken over your padded layer and check that the armor closes cleanly without excessive gaps.

Durability and service: riveted brigandine construction is practical for maintenance. Typical wear points can often be addressed with localized repairs—hardware/rivet work and targeted reinforcement—rather than rebuilding the entire torso.

Tournament checks: this type of brigandine is generally compatible with common inspection expectations across full contact organizations (including HMB, IMCF, and similar formats), but acceptance depends on the specific rule set and on-site inspection of the final configuration.