Worn since antiquity, the puttee was adopted as part of the service uniform of foot and mounted soldiers serving in
British India during the second half of the nineteenth century. In its original form the puttee comprised long strips of cloth worn as a tribal legging in the Himalayas. The
British Indian Army found this garment to be both comfortable and inexpensive, although it was considered to lack the smartness of the
gaiter previously worn. According to the British author and soldier
Patrick Leigh Fermor, infantry puttees were wound up from ankle to knee, but in cavalry regiments they were wound down from knee to ankle. The puttee was subsequently widely adopted by a number of armies including those of the
British Commonwealth, the
Austro-Hungarian Army, the Chinese
National Revolutionary Army, the
Belgian Army, the
Ethiopian Army, the
Dutch Army, the
Imperial German Army (when stocks of leather long marching boots ran short during
WWI), the
French Army, the
Imperial Japanese Army, the
Italian Army, the
Portuguese Army, the
Ottoman Army and the
United States Army. Most of these armies adopted puttees during or shortly before World War I. Puttees were in general use by the
British Army as part of the
khaki service uniform worn from 1902, until 1938 when a new
battledress was introduced, which included short
webbing gaiters secured with buckles. One of the largest providers of the puttee during World War I to the British Army was Fox Brothers, produced at Tonedale Mill, Somerset. Puttees generally ceased to be worn as part of military uniform during World War II. Reasons included the difficulty of quickly donning an item of dress that had to be wound carefully around each leg, plus medical reservations regarding hygiene and
varicose veins. When the British Army finally replaced battledress with the
1960 Pattern Combat Dress, ankle high puttees replaced the webbing gaiters. These continued to be worn until the 1980s. File:Villa del casale 13.jpg|Roman fasciae crurales, depicted in a 4th-century CE hunting scene File:Daubjerg-manden DO-817 r.jpg|Puttees of bog boy Søgårds Mose Man, Denmark, early Iron Age File:New Minster Charter 966 detail Edgar.jpg|King Edgar of England, 966 CE File:Bayeux Tapestry scene57 Harold death.jpg|Battle of Hastings, 1066 CE File:Pre-1900 Indian soldiers.jpg|Soldiers of the
Queen's Own Corps of Guides of the
British Indian Army in 1897. They are in various orders of uniform but all wear puttees. File:OkinawaMarinesDeadJapanese.jpg|Puttees on a dead Japanese soldier in
Okinawa, April 1945 In 2013, the remains of two teenaged Austrian First World War soldiers were found on the . One of them carried a spoon tucked into his puttees. == Legacy ==