Defensive covering for the head, one of the most universal forms of armour.
Helmets are usually thought of as military equipment.
Military helmets date from ancient times. Their basic function was to protect
the head, face, and sometimes the neck from the cutting blows of swords,
spears, arrows, and other weapons. The Assyrians and Persians had helmets of
leather and iron, and the Greeks brought helmet making to a pinnacle of
craftsmanship with their bronze helmets, some of which covered the entire
head, with only a narrow opening in front for vision and breath. The Romans
developed several forms of helmets, including the round legionary's helmet and
the special gladiator's helmet, with broad brim and pierced visor, giving
exceptional protection to head, face, and neck.
In northern and western Europe, early helmets were of leather reinforced with
bronze or iron straps and usually took the form of conical or hemispherical
skullcaps. Gradually the amount of metal increased until entire helmets were
fashioned of iron, still following the same form. About the year 1200 the
helm, or heaume, emerged. It was a flat-topped cylinder that was put on over
the skullcap just before an engagement; experience soon dictated rounded
contours that would cause blows to glance off. At the same time, the skullcap
developed into the basinet, with pieces added to protect the neck and with a
movable visor for the face. By 1500 several highly sophisticated types of
helmets were in use, employing hinges or pivots to permit the piece to be put
on over the head and then fitted snugly around head and neck so that it could
not be knocked off in combat.
In the 16th and 17th centuries light, open helmets with broad brims became
popular. In the 18th and 19th centuries, with the growing effectiveness of
firearms and the consequent decline in use of the sword and spear, helmets
largely disappeared except for the use of light helmets by cavalry. The steel
helmet reappeared, however, as a standard item for infantry in the opening
years of World War I because it protected the head against the high-velocity
metal fragments of exploding artillery shells. The French first adopted the
helmet as standard equipment in late 1914 and were quickly followed by the
British, the Germans, and then the rest of Europe. The typical helmet is a
hardened-steel shell with an inner liner and weighs about 1 to 4 pounds (0.5
to 1.8 kg).
Conical iron and steel helmets -- developed in medieval Persia, Turkey, and
India -- are valued as works of art because of their fine forging and delicate
damascening. In Tibet and China, helmets of bronze, leather, and horn have
been made for centuries, while Japanese helmets with detachable face guards,
finely forged and lacquered, have been recognized as outstanding examples of
the armourer's craft.
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