Monday, August 30, 2010

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Apart from having a variety of personal weapons, the Mongol's also had a type of tool kit that consisted of tools used to fix items. It included items such as a kettle and items to fix weapons and/or clothing items.

Food was rationed for the warriors - if it was entirely necessary, the warrior would drink the blood from his horses vein. It would mean killing the horse - although each warrior and a reserved amount of horses.

Friar John of Plano Carpini has his own account of the types of weapons used in the Mongolian war against China; he also makes a mention of how some of the weapons were made. This account was written in 1245.

Moreover they are required to have these weapons: two long bows or one good one at least, three quivers full of arrows, and one axe, and ropes to draw engines of war. But the richer have single-edged swords, with sharp points, and somewhat crooked. They have also armed horses, with their shoulders and breasts protected; they have helmets and coats of mail. Some of them have jackets for their horses, made of leather artificially doubled or trebled, shaped upon their bodies. The upper part of their helmet is of iron or steel, but that part which circles about the neck and the throat is of leather. Some of them have all their armour of iron made in the following manner: They beat out many thin plates a finger broad, and a hand long, and making in every one of them eight little holes, they lace through three strong and straight leather thongs. So they join the plates one to another, as it were, ascending by de–grees. Then they tie the plates to the thongs, with other small and slender thongs, drawn through the holes, and in the upper part, on each side, they fasten one small doubled thong, that the plates may firmly be knit together. These they make, as well for their horses as for the armour of their men; and they scour them so bright that a man may hold his face in them. Some of them upon the neck of their lance have a hook, with which they attempt to pull men out of their saddles. The heads of their arrows are exceedingly sharp, cutting both ways like a two-edged sword, and they always carry a file in their quivers to sharpen their arrowheads.

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