Kikko (Japanese armour)
Kikko (亀甲, kikkō[1]) are small iron or hardened leather, hexagon shaped armour plates used in the construction of Japanese armor worn by samurai and ashigaru (foot soldiers) of feudal Japan.
Description and use[]
Kikkō refers to the shell of the tortoise or turtle which is formed from small hexagon plates.[2] Individual kikko armour plates were attached to armour by sewing the kikko to a cloth lining through holes drilled in the center or edges of the kikko. Kikko could be sewn between two layers of cloth and hidden from sight. The kikko could be attached to each other by links of chainmail holes drilled in the edges of the kikko. Kikko armor was made for every class of samurai or soldier, high or low.
George Cameron Stone[3] referred to kikko as "brigandine" when he said "in Japan brigandines were often used". He further described this "brigandine" as "small hexagons", "the plates [being] of steel or hard leather", and that "occasionally they covered the whole body".
Use[]
Kikko were used in the construction of traditional Japanese armour, suneate (greaves) and tate-eri (shoulder pads) often incorporated kikko in their design. Haidate (thigh guards) and kote (sleeves) could also be partially or completely armoured with kikko. Lightweight portable folding armour (kikko tatami gusoku) would have a kikko tatami dō"' (folding breastplate), and auxiliary armour items such as wakibiki, manchira, and manju no wa could be armoured with kikko. Kabuto (helmets) could have a neck guard (shikoro) made with kikko plates sewn to a cloth backing.
Ian Bottomley in his book titled Arms and armor of the samurai: the history of weaponry in ancient Japan, shows a forehead protector ("hitai ate") with a kikko hood, and calls the kikko chest armor ("kikko gane do") a form of "tatami", or folding armor.[4]
Gallery[]
Edo period kikko katabira (jacket).
Edo period kikko vest.
Tate-eri (shoulder pad), showing kikko plates lining the neck area.
Kusari (chain mail) and kikko kote (gauntlets).
Edo period kikko haidate (thigh guards) with iron plates, sewn between two layers of cloth.
Edo period chochin kabuto (collapsible helmet) with kikko shikoro (neck guard).
The second set of armor from the right includes kikko dou and kikko haidate (thigh guards).
Edo period kikko katabira and hachi gane with kikko shiroko. The kikko is hidden between layers of cloth.
Detail of kikko armor.
Detail of Edo period kikko katabira (jacket), where the kikko (leather or rawhide) can be seen through a hole in the covering cloth.
Detail of Edo period kikko katabira (jacket), where the kikko (leather or rawhide) can be seen through a hole in the covering cloth.
Suneate (greaves) with kikko on the knee area.
See also[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Japanese kikko armor. |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Samurai armour. |
- Tatami (Japanese armour)
- Brigandine
- Chainmail
- Plated mail
- Japanese armour
- Karuta (Japanese armour)
- Kusari (Japanese mail armour)
References[]
- ^ Kenkyusha's New Japanese-English Dictionary, Kenkyusha Limited, ISBN 4-7674-2015-6
- ^ Sashiko: blue and white quilt art of Japan, Kazuko Mende, Reiko Morishige, Shufunotomo, 1991, pages 22 and 30
- ^ George Cameron Stones, "A Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor: in All Countries and in All Times" p.150
- ^ Ian Bottomley & A.P. Hopson "Arms and Armor of the Samurai: The History of Weaponry in Ancient Japan" P.88 & p.91
External links[]
- Japanese armour
- Samurai armour