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- Morion (helmet) - Wikipedia
Morion (helmet) A morion (Spanish: morrión) (Catalan: morrió) is a type of open-faced combat helmet originally from Spain, used from the beginning of the 16th century to the early-17th century The morion usually had a flat brim and a crest running from front to back
- The Morion: An Introduction to its Development, Form, Function
The Morion: An Introduction to its Development, Form, Function By Jonathan Tavares The helmet type known as a morion has become an iconic symbol of the Renaissance soldier
- MORION Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
morion 1 of 2 noun (1) mo· ri· on ˈmȯr-ē-ˌän : a high-crested helmet with no visor morion 2 of 2 noun (2) : a nearly black variety of smoky quartz
- morion - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
morion (plural morions) (mineralogy) A brown or black variety of quartz [from 18th c ]
- Morion (helmet) | Military Wiki | Fandom
A morion is a type of open helmet used from the middle 16th and early 17th centuries, usually having a flat brim and a crest from front to back It was introduced in the middle of the 16th century, contemporaneous with the exploration of what was to become the southern U S A Explorers like
- MORION Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Morion definition: an open helmet of the 16th and early 17th centuries, worn by common soldiers and usually having a flat or turned-down brim and a crest from front to back
- Morion (helmet) - The British Museum
'The next head-piece to which we shall refer - that beautiful morion which is the finest helmet of its kind with which we are acquainted - comes from Milan, and was bequeathed to the British Museum by the late Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild
- Morion - German, Nuremberg - The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Alert dealers rescued them from the ignominous fate of slowly perishing in the obscurity of backstage shelves, and today they are prized collector's objects This morion is stamped with the proofmark of the armorers' guild of Nuremberg and a master's mark, M R, probably the mark of Martin Rothschmied (died 1597)
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