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Infantry equipment

A photograph of a soldier, 39kB

For the front line infantry the Composition on Warfare (I.3-4) describes a set of minimal equipment consisting of a turban over a thick felt cap and a coat (kavadion) made of coarse silk quilted with cotton wadding “as thick as can be stitched”. To avoid the encumbrance to movement that such a stiff, heavy garment would inflict, the arms are to pass out through openings in the armpits and the sleeves buttoned back to the shoulders. LeoÕs Taktika is more optimistic, implying that such troops might have mail or lamellar, helmets and other armour.
This man also wears padded leggings, kampotouva or touvia and the type of boot probably called mouzakia in our source.1
These troops were to be armed with spears 4 to 5 metres long, “belt-hung swords” and either a mace or an axe. This variety of axe is called a tzikourion.

Later sources imply that something very like this remained in use to the late twelfth century, and probably beyond.2

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Notes

  1. Writing in the mid-tenth century, Achmet gives a highly informative commentary a variety of clothing. Francis Drexl, ed., Achmetis Oneirocriticon, Leipzig 1925, p. 198 for touvia. Steven Micheal Oberhelman, tr., The Oneirocriticon of Achmet, Lubbock, 1991, p. 216, however, as with most translations, this is not very reliable regarding technical details.
  2. John R. Melville Jones, tr., Eustathios of Thessaloniki: The Capture of Thessaloniki, Canberra 1988, p. 89/90 (Greek/English).