• PugJesus@lemmy.worldOPM
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    3 days ago

    Funny enough, one of the suspected advantages of this is that, though it required a skilled specialist to make, it was relatively quick compared to chainmail - lorica segmentata was designed to be mass-produced, essentially. ~20 big plates vs. 25,000 rings for mail.

    It’s harder to repair, though. A few links get busted in mail, you just make a few new ones of roughly the same shape and type and forge them in. A teenage apprentice of the local provincial town can bang out the repair. A bit of the lorica segmentata gets busted, and you need another plate of just the right size and curvature to replace it, and the local blacksmith of the ~100 population provincial town probably isn’t going to be able to handle it.

    When the Legions moved away from self-sufficient units (wherein specialist legionary blacksmiths handled a large portion of the work), the lorica segmentata, likewise, fell by the wayside.

    • Typotyper@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      Thank you. I miss the historical nerds sharing rid bits. Seriously. I love this shit

      I was talking to one guy once (few times a while back) and turns out he was an Oxford phd student and specialized in 3-4 ancient languages.

      • PugJesus@lemmy.worldOPM
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        3 days ago

        Thank you. I miss the historical nerds sharing rid bits. Seriously. I love this shit

        I live to please! 🙏

        I was talking to one guy once (few times a while back) and turns out he was an Oxford phd student and specialized in 3-4 ancient languages.

        I’m always in awe of folk with that level of drive and education. Like being a Little Leaguer meeting someone on a baseball card.