Comment on Hit him with an argument he can't refute
Deconceptualist@leminal.space 1 week agoIt wasn’t many men either. Plate armor was incredibly expensive (it had to be custom made so the joins fit you correctly) and only the wealthiest nobles had it. There weren’t entire armies of knights in armor, that’s just fantasy.
PugJesus@piefed.social 1 week ago
“Plate armor” in the sense of the ornate full-body panoply was restricted to the wealthy, but plate armor in the sense of armor literally made of plates was common for professional footsoldiers of the Renaissance.
Not only that, but a significant proportion of medieval armies often were knights and their financially-supported retinues precisely because it was knights who, under feudal systems, were the ones expected to go to war - at Agincourt in 1415 AD, for example, a majority or near-majority of the French army would have been fully armored cavalrymen.