Rondel dagger - Wikipedia Rondel means 'round' or 'circular'; the dagger gets its name from its round (or similarly shaped, e g octagonal) hand guard and round or spherical pommel (knob on the end of the grip) The blade's tang extends through the handle, which is cylindrical, normally carved from wood or bone
Rondel Daggers – Arms Armor The rondel dagger was one of the most popular weapons of the late Middle Ages A long, thick-spined, and wickedly pointed fighting knife, the rondel was optimized for penetrating thick clothing, forcing open chain mail links, or being thrust through the joints in plate armor
Rondel | Medieval, French, Verse | Britannica Rondel, a fixed poetic form that runs on two rhymes It is a variant of the rondeau The rondel often consists of 14 lines of 8 or 10 syllables divided into three stanzas (two quatrains and a sextet), with the first two lines of the first stanza serving as the refrain of the second and third
rondel - Wiktionary, the free dictionary rondel (plural rondels) A metric form of verse using two rhymes, usually fourteen 8- to 10-syllable lines in three stanzas, with the first lines of the first stanza returning as refrain of the next two
The Rondel Dagger -- myArmoury. com The name "rondel" is derived from the disc-shaped guards of the dagger Even though this name is modern and lacks any historical roots it has become popular and widely accepted
Rondel (armour) — Grokipedia A rondel is a circular disc of metal incorporated into late medieval European plate armour, primarily to safeguard joints, gaps, and other vulnerable points in the wearer's harness where mobility was essential [1]
Medieval Rondel or Basegew The Rondel or Basegew (or besague) was a circular piece of metal attached to a helmet, breastplate, or gauntlet It was worn as part of a harness for a plate armour
Engineering:Rondel dagger - HandWiki Rondel means 'round' or 'circular'; the dagger gets its name from its round (or similarly shaped, e g octagonal) hand guard and round or spherical pommel (knob on the end of the grip) The blade's tang extends through the handle, which is cylindrical, normally carved from wood or bone