I know people who dress in armour today and in watching them put it on I would guess a good 30 minutes. Usually, they are starting the with chain mail and other things on so it could take much more time from scratch.
Armour began to decline in popularity in the middle of the 16th century, and was mostly abandoned in the 2nd half of the 17th C, as gunpowder weapons became more and more powerful - and armour would be so heavy to protect that it would be impossible to wear.
however, the knight, as a military unit was already almost extinct by the 16th century - the cost of training a fighting man to become a knight was incredibly expensive, and made them impractical as firearms made it easier to train soldiers who could fight with only a few weeks of training, not years.
Complete suits of plate armour were comparatively rare and often kept as "parade armour" or tournament armour for the most senior nobles. Some complete suits of plate appeared around 1350, but most date to the 15th century, almost at the end of the medieval period.
Not having a full suit of plate armour kept the costs down as well as the overall weight being carried, so most knights opted for partial plate right through the medieval period. Alternatives (mail and hardened leather) remained very popular.
They were made obsolete by the invention and use of gunpower.
Metal armor (plate armor) was not invented in medieval age, it was already used by ancient greeks and romans. Metal armor allowed knights to be stronger.
It went from chainmail hauberk, helm, sword, shield, axe and any other combination to full plate armor and generaly a two handed weapon (poleaxe or greatsword mostly).
Samurai armor made of steel plate sometimes leather. Early Samurai armor was made from brass.
it was obsolete by the invention of the gun
Full armour consists of the following:Head: the helmet there were many different designs of helmet, each with different names and shapes. Some of the commonest were:the Nasal (a conical helmet with a nose guard hanging down over the brim of the helm, worn by early knights in the Norman era),the Bascinet (a 14th century helmet type which protected the sides of the neck)the Sallet (a 15th C type which have good protection to the neck, and face, with a visor)Neck and throat: this was protected by one of two peices: a Bevor, which cupped the chin, or a Gorget, which wrapped around the entire neck, sitting on the shoulders.Arms: the shoulders were protected by one of two peices. a set of sliding segments called Spaulders, or a larger more rigid protection called Pauldrons.Below the shoulder, the upper arm was protected by the Rerebrace.the elbow was cupped by the Couterthe forearm was protected by the Vanbrace.the hands were then enclosed in Gauntlets.Body: This was normally protected by large peices of steel, the breastplate and backplate for chestt and back respectively. In some types of armour, the body was protected by many smaller plates, which were called the Coat of plates, or Brigandine, instead.Below the breastplate, the lower waist and groin was protected by a set of metal strips, called the Fauld, onto which large plates called tassets, that covered the top of the legs were hung.Legs were covered by Cuisses, which covered the upper leg, the Poleyn, which covers the knee, and the Greave, which covers the shins.Feet are protected by the Sabatons.Finally, if you were a knight, the entire harness of armour comes with a servant or squire to do all the dirty polishing and maintainance work...
Knights started wearing plate armor for better protection against arrows and weapons in battle. This armor increased their defense but also reduced their mobility. Additionally, plate armor allowed knights to display their status and wealth.
for protection
I belive a steel plate
Metal armor (plate armor) was not invented in medieval age, it was already used by ancient greeks and romans. Metal armor allowed knights to be stronger.
They have plate armor , weapons in weight of tons . And they are in horseback .
They would wear suits of metal plate armor, but early knights wore tough leather
Some knights began to put plates of metal over vital parts of their bodies for added protection. Soon they were completely covered in plate armor and they stoppedwearingchain mail. By the 1400s most knights were wearingfull plate armor. ... Many pieces of the armor had a unique name.
he couldnt move fast enough
Knights' mail was made out of iron rings. When the knights progreesed to plate armor, it was made of still plates sewn together. The Steel got better in quality over the ages, especially when firearms came to Europe.
The greatest enemy of plate armor was gunpowder and various fire weapons. Gunpowder was invented in ancient China but it was used in Europe from 13th century. Plate armor was masively used also in later times - 30th year war (1618-1648). The plate armor does not offered a protection against fire weapons but it was still great tool to save its wearer from swords and sabres wounds. The great example of using plate armor in the time of fire weapons is suit of Polish winged hussares (probably the best heavy cavalry in the world). Attack of Polish hussares was the last thing the thousands of Svedes, Cossacs, Mongols and Russians ever saw.
No - Light armor is leather, cloth, etc. Plate armor is considered heavy armor.
Death Knight don't wear "DK Armor", they can wear anything from cloth to plate. In a DK's first 4-6 levels you can get armor and weapons that no one else can get because they are rewards for DK only quests. If the other plate wearing classes could get it, they also could wear the armor.