{{Short description|Type of ancient Greek body armour}} [[File:Agios Athanasios 1 fresco.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Fresco of Macedonian soldiers, the two on the left wear purple armour with rows of pteruges, possibly depictions of the kotthybos. Tomb of Agios Athanasios, Thessaloniki, Greece, 4th century BC]] '''Kotthybos''' ({{langx|el|κότθυβος}}) was a type of Macedonian body armour.
==Etymology== The name originally referred to a metallic cooking pot used by ancient Macedonian soldiers to prepare their own food.<ref>Hammond, p.34</ref> The term appears to be a variant of terms such as ''kossymbos'' and ''kosymbe''.<ref>Heckel and Jones, p. 24</ref>
==Use and possible construction== Ancient sources are unclear as to the form of the ''kotthybos'', but the context of references to it indicates that it was a form of armour associated with the 'Foot Companions' (''Pezhetairoi'') who formed the Macedonian phalanx. It is recorded that the fine of 2 obols imposed on a soldier for losing a ''kotthybos'', was the same as for the ''konos'', a simple, conical, bronze helmet, and less than for the ''sarissa'', a long pike.<ref>Crawford and Whitehead, p. 596</ref>
Modern scholars are divided as to what the ''kotthybos'' was; some consider it a padded garment worn under other forms of armour, whilst the majority regard it an alternative term for the ''spolas'' or'' linothorax'' (neologism), the typical Hellenic and Hellenistic armour made of glued or stitched layers of linen, or a combination of layers of linen and leather. It is likely that the old armours that Alexander the Great ordered to be burnt, and were therefore non-metallic, were examples of the ''kotthybos''.<ref>Matthew, pp. 116, 119-120 and note 134</ref>
==References== {{reflist}}
==Bibliography== *Crawford, M.H, and Whitehead, D. (1983) ''Archaic and Classical Greece: A Selection of Ancient Sources in Translation'', Cambridge University Press. *Hammond, N.G.l. (1989) ''Alexander the Great, King, Commander, and Statesman'', Bloomsbury Academic. {{ISBN|1-85399-068-X}} *Heckel, W. and Jones, R. (2006) ''Macedonian Warrior Alexander's elite infantryman'', Osprey. {{ISBN|978-1-84176-950-9}} *Matthew, C. (2015) ''An Invincible Beast: Understanding the Hellenistic Pike Phalanx in Action'', Pen and Sword.
==See also==
* Konos
Category:Ancient Greek military terminology Category:Ancient Macedonian military equipment