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ROM050A - Marching Legionnaire with Sack Cloth Shield Cover
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🛡️ What the shield cover was for
The cloth or leather wrapping around the shield served practical purposes:
- Protection from weather (rain, dust, sun damage)
- Preserving paint and wooden structure during long marches
- Preventing scratches or warping in transport
- Keeping gear quiet and secure in baggage movement
It was typically a simple linen or leather wrap tied tightly around the scutum.
🎒 How it fit into marching life
A legionnaire on the move would often carry:
- Shield (covered in cloth)
- Helmet (sometimes also wrapped or carried separately)
- Weapons (gladius and pilum)
- Personal pack (rations, tools, cloak)
This system became especially common after the reforms of Gaius Marius, when soldiers were expected to carry more of their own equipment during marches.
🏛️ Why it mattered
- Maintained readiness for combat even during long marches
- Reduced equipment damage in harsh campaigning conditions
- Improved mobility by keeping gear compact and secured
- Reflected the disciplined, self-sufficient nature of Roman infantry
🧠 In simple terms
A “marching legionnaire with shield cover” is:
A Roman soldier moving across long distances with his equipment carefully protected, ready to remove the cover and fight at a moment’s notice.
Brand: Thomas Gunn
