Early and High Middle Ages Aventails of
chain mail started appearing on
Northern European helmets as early as the
6th century, as seen on several
Vendel Era helmets, most notably the
Valsgärde 8 helmet (
580–
630 AD) from
Uppsala, Sweden, but also the well preserved
Coppergate Helmet (ca.
750–
800 AD) from
York, England. These early appearances varied greatly in configuration, the Valsgärde 8 helmet featuring an aventail which enclosed the entire lower face, throat and neck, versus the Coppergate Helmet, which combines hanging cheek guards with an aventail for the neck (a configuration likely also used on the similar 7th century Anglo-Saxon
Pioneer Helmet). Byzantine helmets also sometimes show evidence of mail aventails. A rare find of a helmet in Yasenovo in Bulgaria, dating to the 10th century, may represent an example of a distinctively Byzantine style. This rounded helmet has a brow-band pierced for the attachment of a face-covering camail. The enclosed Vendel style aventail came to be the most conventional type going forward into the
High Middle Ages. Some configurations fixed the frontal aventail to a spectacle visor (upper face mask) like the Vendel 8 helmet or a nasal guard, notably seen on several
Rus' and
Kievan Rus' high medieval helmets. Other configurations let the aventail hang loose in front of or under the face like a veil, most likely with an inner liner against chafing or padding against blows. A reason to not connect the frontal mail to a spectacle visor or nasal guard might have been to allow for a ventail, a flap of mail which allowed the user to open and close the mail over the mouth for added flexibility. Archeological finds of complete aventails from the early medieval period are however sparse and more than often only a few perforated attachment holes remain. File:ValsgardeB.png|
Valsgärde 8 helmet (
580–
630 AD) Holes in the leather band were passed over the vervelles, and a waxed cord was passed through the holes in the vervelles to secure it. (1376) Aventails were commonly seen on
bascinets in the 14th century and served as a replacement for a complete mail hood (
coif). Some aventails were decorated with edging in
brass or
bronze links (sometimes gilded), or with a zig-zag lower edge (vandyked). By the mid 14th century, the aventail had replaced the
mail coif completely. By the dawn of the 15th century, the plate armored neck guard (
gorget) of the Great Bascinet started to replace the aventail. == References ==