He said; "My necklace shall be my sword-belt, and my turban shall be adorned with a royal aigrette."
The last case was that of Sir Francis Michell in 1621, whose spurs were hacked from his heels, his sword-belt cut, and his sword broken over his head by the heralds in Westminster Hall.8 Roughly speaking, the age of chivalry properly so called may be said to have extended from the beginning of the crusades to the end of the Wars of the Roses.
At last, he sighed and strapped the bladder to his sword belt.
The Claymore was a much heavier, two-handed sword unlike the broadsword, which was carried on the sword belt.