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how considerably did a medieval shield value?

Question by Terence: how a lot did a medieval shield expense?
please just notify me the answer no other nonsense i actually just need the actual answer

Very best response:

Response by thealgamaga
A medieval shield back again in those times or right now?? I will answer the two:

Back in Medieval times there was not a normal or central currency for every single nations. So bartering and the good quality of the Medieval shield had affected the overall rates. Some traded foods products, raw supplies, and other issues back again then as peasants had extremely minor gold if they desired to purchase a shield.

For prosperous noble males they would most likely do the same but would also purchase medieval shields in gold and silver pieces.

These days collectors can acquire medieval shields from cheap prices to extremely high selling prices dependent on wherever the medieval shield originated, or utilized it.

What do you think? Solution under!

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3 Thoughts to “how considerably did a medieval shield value?”

  1. cp_scipiom

    the problem with simple answers is that it really depends on the type, place and time. “medieval times” were pretty long and varied, and so were the weapon standards

    the average foot soldier would have a shield made from 3-4 wooden planks. If he was lucky it would be covered with leather and reinforced with iron. Typical early medieval model, poor mans late medieval. cost- a couple of silver coins or a goat

    a richer soldier would have one made from plywood. better models were bound with leather and iron. cost a gold coin, 3-4 pigs

    even more upscale would be an all-metal model, with the best ones hammered out of one piece of metal. cost 2-3 cows or several gold coins

    then there were foreign made shields- turkish, moorish, mongol, sudanese. literally hundreds of types- some dedicated to foot combat, others to horse. and some universal types

    cheapest would be to buy from a used weapons merchant just after a battle, or scavenge a battlefield. Just make sure to erase any personal signs/emblems from the face of the shield- lest one encouners a relative…

  2. Jonathan

    I don’t recall ever seeing any documentation of the cost of a shield, or any weapon for that matter. Medieval Europe wasn’t like a dungeons and dragons game where you go buy weapons in a store for fixed prices. Normally blacksmiths worked for lords in exchange for housing and food and the lords either used the stuff the smiths made themselves, or handed them on to their underlings as gifts. There wasn’t a monetary “price.”

  3. Dapifer

    I know of one record for the cost of shields. The Pipe Rolls (the financial records of the English kings) record that in 1249 two shields for a judicial duel were purchased for the price of 67 pence for the two and a further 3 pence were given to a craftsman to refurbish them. Later, a clerk doodled a picture of the shields in action in the margin of a Curia Regis Roll. You can see the picture here:
    http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/candp/punishment/g03/g03cs2s1.htm

    As you can see, these shields would come from the period of transition between kite shields and heaters. They probably had a core of steamed and bent wood with canvas glued over it and covered with gesso and paint. The bosses may or may not have been metal.

    ETA: For comparison purposes, in England around the same time an agricultural labourer would make between half a penny and two pennies a day. A skilled construction tradesman made an average of three and a half pennies a day. A bull cost twelve shillings and sixpence, and a pig cost two shillings and half a penny.

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