So I was watching
Vikings again last night (and,
again, staying up waaaay too late), because of its fascinating portrayal of European cultures in the 8th century. As a product of the
History Channel, I expect it to be at least
somewhat historically accurate, even if the drama is created for...um...dramatic purposes. But things like the clothes, armor, artwork, village life, religion, politics, law...these are the things I'm interested in and the reason the show draws me.
Well, that and Norsemen hitting people with axes. I
love that.
Anyway, the episodes I streamed last night (from the second season) raised some interesting thoughts about the medieval economy...not just monetary economy, but the economy of raiding (ships and men and armies). But in thinking about it, it brought me back to some recent thoughts I'd had...specifically an interest in having a B/X campaign set in the EARLY "middle ages," circa 6th century or 7th century.
[
there's a bit more fantasy in this time period (think the film Dragonslayer or the Northern and Southern dynasties of China...the period of the historic Mulan hero), while still having recognizable fighters of the traditional D&D stamp. Hell, even some cities large enough to support thieves of the adventuring type, and characters that would pass for D&D clerics are performing miraculous deeds as well. Even if the setting isn't historic Earth, it's not a bad time period to emulate]
And as those little wheels started turning in my head, including the sticky wicket of economy
that I've discussed before (and
before that...jeez, another recurring topic), it hit me that I have at least some (again, presumably
somewhat researched) economic information from that time period (at least with regard costs): Chaosium's
Pendragon, and it's tasty supplement
Knights Adventurous.
So it was that between 1ish and 3am last night (well, 2:45, really) I found myself with a bee-in-the-proverbial-bonnet, doing my usual song-and-dance crazy trying to reconcile internet-researched records of historic price lists with game product written by History majors in their spare time.
No need to remind me of the futility in such an exercise; I know the drill. Here's the part that MIGHT interest you: once I eventually circled around to giving up, I spent a good chunk of time converting the 6th century armor types of
Pendragon to the B/X system. For your enjoyment (and for future posterity; i.e. so I don't have to do it again), I'll go ahead and post it here. Synchs up pretty well, actually.
[
prices will be given as per Pendragon, where one pound (L) = 20 shillings (s) = 240 pennies (d). A campaign set in 6th century Camelot would probably want to change the "gold standard" of B/X to the silver shilling, and so prices will be listed using a shilling base]
Suit of Armor (without padding or helmet)
Leather: 1s, 3d
Cuir bouilli (boiled leather): 5s
"Norman" mail: 15s
Reinforced mail: 80s
Plate and mail: 200s
Helmets
Open helm: 3s, 4d
Great helm: 8s, 4d
Visored helm: 12s, 6d
Padding ("dublet")
Normal: 7d
Fancy: 2s, 1d
Silk, 3 colors: 20s
Armor value (
AV) is subtracted from base AC 9 to arrive at the character's armor class.
AV 1: leather, padding, open helm
AV 2:
cuir bouilli, closed helm (great or visored)
AV 3: mail with padding
AV 4: plate-and-mail with padding
AV 6: full plate with padding
 |
Typical "Norman" Mail |
Norman mail without padding has an AV of 1; both reinforced mail and plate-and-mail have an AV of 2 without padding. Padding is not worn with leather or
cuir bouilli. All armors are generally worn with an open helm except reinforced mail and plate-and-mail which are usually worn with a closed (great or visored) helm. Full plate is always worn with a closed helm and padding.
AC | Standard Armor Worn |
9 | None |
8 | Leather, dublet, or open helm (only) |
7 | Leather + helm, cuir bouilli |
6 | Cuir boilli + helm, mail |
5 | Mail + helm (Norman style), plate-and-mail |
4 | Mail + closed helm |
3 | Plate-and-mail + closed helm |
2 | |
1 | Full plate armor |
|
|
 |
Plate-and-Mail; AC 3 |
These would be typical AC values (based on usual type of padding/helmet worn). A shield would, of course,
subtract 1 from the listed AC, providing a range of
9 to 0. Please note that no cost is given for "full plate armor" (the typical
Milanese variety and similar) because it's not widely available prior to the 15th century; however, in a fantasy world it might be something created by some genius wizard or mad dwarf inventor. As with the author of Pendragon, I provide it here for the sake of "completeness."
: )