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384:. By this date the traditional knee-length puttees had been replaced with short ankle-length leggings worn with battledress. There were not enough khaki leggings for issue, so the 48th Highlanders made do with unofficial blue ones reportedly cut down from stocks of blue cloth found in regimental stores. The King inquired as to why the 48th wore different "puttees" from the rest of the brigade. Upon being told of the shortage, the king replied that he liked the blue puttees better and that they should keep them. The 48th Highlanders continued to wear blue puttees until the regimental battle dress was eventually phased out.
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of soldiers, there were no military stores; uniforms had to be fashioned from scratch. In the absence of khaki broadcloth, puttees were fashioned from blue broadcloth. The
Newfoundland Regiment was thus nicknamed "The Blue Puttees". This distinctive feature was retained for several months until the
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Puttees generally ceased to be worn as part of military uniform during World War II. Reasons included the difficulty of quickly donning an item of dress that had to be wound carefully around each leg, plus medical reservations regarding hygiene and
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214:. However the cheapness and easy availability of cloth leggings meant that they were retained in the Italian, French, Japanese and some other armies until various dates between 1941 and 1945. The
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during the second half of the nineteenth century. In its original form the puttee comprised long strips of cloth worn as a tribal legging in the
Himalayas. The
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secured with buckles. One of the largest providers of the puttee during World War I to the
British Army was Fox Brothers, produced at Tonedale Mill, Somerset.
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etc. They consist of a long narrow piece of cloth wound tightly, and spirally round the leg, and serving to provide both support (as a
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Worn since antiquity, the puttee was adopted as part of the service uniform of foot and mounted soldiers serving in
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found this garment to be both comfortable and inexpensive, although it was considered to lack the smartness of the
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184:. Most of these armies adopted puttees during or shortly before World War I. Puttees were in general use by the
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90:) and protection. They were worn by both mounted and dismounted soldiers, generally taking the place of the
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R.M. Barnes, p282 "A History of the
Regiments & Uniforms of the British Army", First Sphere Books 1972
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typically used them with laced ankle boots where the legs were insufficiently protected, though
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532:"BBC - World War One At Home, Tonedale Mill, Somerset: Weaving Puttees For Worldwide Soldiers"
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regiment was issued with standard
British Army uniform and equipment upon arrival in England.
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In 2013, the remains of two teenaged
Austrian First World War soldiers were found on the
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The puttee was subsequently widely adopted by a number of armies including those of the
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Quoted in "Patrick Leigh Fermor: An
Adventure" by Artemis Cooper, London 2012, page 37
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in Ottawa depicts
Canadian Army infantrymen from World War I wearing puttees
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Close-up of a World War I era United States Army infantryman's puttees
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in 1897. They are in various orders of uniform but all wear puttees.
627:"Melting glaciers in northern Italy reveal corpses of WW1 soldiers"
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Roman fasciae crurales, depicted in a 4th-century CE hunting scene
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previously worn. According to the
British author and soldier
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Puttees of bog boy Søgårds Mose Man, Denmark, early Iron Age
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When the
British Army finally replaced battledress with the
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were given nicknames based on non-standard leg wear: the
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Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
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449:(11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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339:Royal Newfoundland Regiment
335:Canadian infantry regiments
291:Queen's Own Corps of Guides
277:Battle of Hastings, 1066 CE
138:National Revolutionary Army
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565:British Battledress1937-61
343:48th Highlanders of Canada
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227:1960 Pattern Combat Dress
688:Hindu religious clothing
589:The British Army 1965-80
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354:Dominion of Newfoundland
30:Not to be confused with
446:Encyclopædia Britannica
673:How to put on a Puttee
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166:Imperial Japanese Army
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40:putte (disambiguation)
36:putti (disambiguation)
703:Russian folk clothing
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378:1st Canadian Division
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134:Austro-Hungarian Army
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154:Imperial German Army
130:British Commonwealth
123:Patrick Leigh Fermor
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88:compression garment
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350:World War I
307: [
197:battledress
162:French Army
682:Categories
538:2020-01-29
456:References
150:Dutch Army
651:. p. 46.
394:Footwraps
382:George VI
356:raised a
220:jackboots
409:Leggings
388:See also
366:garrison
358:regiment
341:and the
216:Red Army
180:and the
80:winingas
72:legwraps
599:(p. 12)
434::
403:Gaiters
372:During
362:militia
293:of the
204:gaiters
201:webbing
160:), the
105:History
92:leather
18:Puttees
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612:
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571:
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441:Puttee
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317:Legacy
176:, the
172:, the
168:, the
164:, the
152:, the
148:, the
144:, the
140:, the
132:, the
119:gaiter
99:gaiter
59:puttie
55:puttee
534:. BBC
416:Notes
311:]
190:khaki
96:cloth
67:paṭṭī
63:Hindi
38:, or
32:putty
653:ISBN
610:ISBN
593:ISBN
569:ISBN
500:ISBN
470:ISBN
352:the
325:The
82:and
443:".
364:or
158:WWI
94:or
684::
629:.
514:^
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309:it
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78:,
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53:A
34:,
659:.
577:.
541:.
508:.
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20:)
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