by Brother Ranulf » Wed Dec 15, 2010 3:23 pm
With regard to Welsh shields and moustaches/haircuts, Giraldus Cambrensis is a reliable late 12th century source. In his "Description of Wales", Book 1 chapter11 he states that the styles of his day date back to the time of the Romans, so they can certainly be applied to pre-Conquest Wales.
"Both the men and the women cut their hair short and shape it round the ears and eyes. Like the Parthians the women cover their heads with a flowing white veil which sticks up in folds like a crown. . . . the men shave their beards, leaving only their moustaches. This is not a new habit but one which goes back to time immemorial . . . Sometimes they shave their heads too, so that they can move more freely . . . Of all the people I have seen the Welsh are the most particular in shaving the lower parts of the body."
In chapter 8 of the same book he refers to the Welsh using round shields, handfuls of arrows and long spears.
No mention of black shields (I would be interested if anyone knows of such a reference).
Short hair was certainly the Welsh style - but if it had to be cropped around the ears and eyes it can not have been "short" in the modern sense, simply shorter than the contemporary English fashion, which was often very long. Bare legs and feet, cloaks and belted tunics were the most common common clothing for men - Giraldus mentions meeting the son of a prince dressed exactly in that way. There was nothing like the same class structure in Wales as in Norman England, so for the Welsh at least "status" had little meaning.
Brother Ranulf
"Patres nostri et nos hanc insulam in brevi edomuimus in brevi nostris subdidimus legibus, nostris obsequiis mancipavimus" - Walter Espec 1138