mandilion

Etymology 1
From (from 1572), from  + ; compare 🇨🇬 (1598).

Noun

 * 1) A loose outer garment resembling a cassock or coat, often sleeveless, worn by soldiers over armour or by menservants as a type of overcoat.
 * 2) * 1609, T. Deckar (Thomas Dekker), The Guls Horne-booke, London: Imprinted at London [by ] for R. S[ergier?]; republished as T. Decker; J[ohn] N[ott], The Gull's Hornbook: Stultorum plena sunt omnia. Al savio mezza parola basta, Bristol: Reprinted for J. M. Gutch and sold in London by R. Baldwin, and R. Triphook, 1812, 921008261, pages 68–69:
 * You see likewise, that the lion, being the king of beasts; the horse, being the lustiest creature; the unicorn, whose horn is worth half a city; all these go with no more clothes on their backs, than what nature hath bestowed upon them: but your baboons, and your jackanapes, being the scum and rascality of all the hedge-creepers, they go in jerkins and mandilions.

Etymology 2
See mandylion.