A knight is generally of the nobility. A non-noble man-at-arms, if he is wealthy, can be equipped very comparably to a knight if he can afford it. There was no rule saying that 'only the nobility could have a full harness.' The reason mostly knights have a full harness is because they could afford to buy one. So the differences are in social class and wealth, but remember that 'man-at-arms' includes everyone equipped for melee combat, including the noble knights.
The term 'Man-at-arms' includes any equipped soldier. A knight is a man-at-arms, a non-noble footsoldier is also a man-at-arms. Man-at-arms is an all-inclusive term.A knight is generally of the nobility. A non-noble man-at-arms, if he is wealthy, can be equipped very comparably to a knight if he can afford it. There was no rule saying that 'only the nobility could have a full harness.' The reason mostly knights have a full harness is because they could afford to buy one. So the differences are in social class and wealth, but remember that 'man-at-arms' includes everyone equipped for melee combat, including the noble knights.
"All knights are men-at-arms, but not all men-at-arms are knights."
Quote from: Ian on 2014-02-01, 00:55:18A knight is generally of the nobility. A non-noble man-at-arms, if he is wealthy, can be equipped very comparably to a knight if he can afford it. There was no rule saying that 'only the nobility could have a full harness.' The reason mostly knights have a full harness is because they could afford to buy one. So the differences are in social class and wealth, but remember that 'man-at-arms' includes everyone equipped for melee combat, including the noble knights.This also depends a lot on which century you're talking about. Very early on, the term "knight" just meant a man-at-arms who could also afford a horse. Later, "knight" became a formal title, but still strictly referred to a type of warrior. By the 16th century, it had almost entirely become a title of lower nobility, and had little to do with combat anymore. During the 14th century, which is very popular here on the forum, it was in that transitional stage. It was somewhat nobility-like, but also being a wealthy warrior. However throughout all of this, "man at arms" refers generically to someone who is skilled and equipped to fight.
And where do you feel the condottieri or huscarl's fit in?