Mitten Gauntlet
Mitten-style metal gauntlet with unified finger shell
The mitten gauntlet is one branch of the metal glove that the knight of 14th- and 15th-century Europe set on his hand, and took its name from the form in which only the thumb stood apart while the four fingers were bound together within a single metal shell. While the finger gauntlet that grew up at the same time covered all five fingers each on its own, the mitten gauntlet covered four fingers in a single face with hardly a gap between the knuckles, so that the grain of the protection over that face was a little thicker and unbroken compared to the finger gauntlet. The hand of the maker took less work at one place, so the price of a single pair was lighter, and so in the early 14th century, when the full plate harness was just taking root, almost every knight set the same shape on his hand. Despite the great fault that the fine play of five fingers each on its own was held back, the same shape fit a spear, a poleaxe, or a flail, in which only the grip needed to be sure, and so it held firm in the seat of the tournament until the late 15th century.