And while laymen are often not aware, I'm sure you are Matt that a knights lance, (even the combat lance as opposed to the one used in tournaments), was essentially also a throw-away weapon very likely to break upon each charge. A few lances may have been carried by a knights squire, after they were used up it was down to the sword, wasn't it?
Later cavalry in the case of Polish hussars and the like were sometimes totally dependent on their sword as a primary weapon.
Did war lances break that easily? We don't really know - lancers in the Napoleonic era didn't have any problem making repeated charges and melees with the same lance.
But this is not really the point - how many times and how long do you think a body of 'knightly' cavalry would usually engage the enemy? Most examples I can think of, with a few notable exceptions, involve one charge and one melee before victory or defeat. That doesn't provide a great amount of time and opportunity to get your sword beaten up, even if you managed to use it once or twice.
CONTEXT.
It is pointless talking about hypothetic 'medieval battles' - please refer to specific examples.
Take the French charge at Agincourt - two wings that were channelled into one, probably reached the English lines despite losing horses to archers and then a brief melee, and finished. Even Hastings where the Norman and Breton cavalry was deployed all day against the English shield wall - they repeatedly attacked and withdrew, attacking where they could with spear and sword and at key moments surrounding separated bodies of infantry and dispatching them. Certainly swords were used - this is well documented in the accounts by William of Malmesbury etc, but how long was the average sword in use? A few seconds maybe.
In an test-cutting session over the course of one afternoon a sword is likely to see far more continual use than an average sword in one medieval battle.
Yes some dismounted knights particularly in the later Renaisssance preferred to use weapons lke poll-axes as primary weapons
Dismounted knights in the 'later renaissance'?......... <img src="/forum/images/icons/confused.gif" alt="" />
I've yet to read this interesting sounding book, but let me ask you, does it deal primarily with the technical aspects of forging swords, or the economics surrounding the production of weapons and the role it played in the politics of the period?
Dude, that sounds like a quote from Amazon or something <img src="/forum/images/icons/laugh.gif" alt="" />.
Given that it gives results of steel hardness, and tests against weapons, do you think it only deals with economics and politics?... <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" />
I know that rockwell hardness is only one of many ways to measure the important properties of a sword.
Err, it's a test of hardness..
That only scratches the surface
That is true, in a way, but wouldn't you rather know something more about medieval swords, rather than not? <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
There are many subtleties we do not yet grasp.
So that means you prefer not to read the book?
My attitude is that I would rather read a book to learn what it does contain rather than not read it because of what it does not contain. <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" />
I think you've missed my point completely. There is a lot to learn here if you are willing.
Matt
