Armor
For regular patrol duties and even
ceremonial occasions, dōshin dressed in simple
patterned kimono, often with the bottom edges pulled up in
front and stuck in their obi, dark blue tabi, and a
black haori. (Wearing a kimono without hakama
was called kinagashi style. In most social situations, it
was considered improper for a samurai not to wear hakama.
However, dōshin
were generally from the lowest samurai rank and social
status.)
Before arresting dangerous
criminals, dōshin dressed in black waist-length kimono
and tight-fitting pants. Chain mail undergarments as well as heavy
cloth hand and shin wraps with metal strips sewn into the cloth
provided protection against sword or knife cuts to their feet or
forearms. To protect their heads, they wore hachimaki with
either metal wires sewn between the cloth layers or a hachi-gane
(metal strip) placed over the forehead. Finally, they bound
the hachimaki over the tops of their ears to prevent them
from being severed by a glancing sword slash.
Copyright © 2009. Please do not
use the photographs or the text on this site without permission.
(Image use must include the statement: "Copyright © 2009.
Photograph by Don Cunningham.")
|