Anthony R. Camacho wrote:As a long time epee fencer, I believe that rapiers, as dueling weapons, are superior than sword and buckler. Most rapiers would have a longer reach than the single hand swords used with bucklers. Further, the rapier fighter has the superior advantage of prolonged endurance with the lighter weight of the rapier. Finally, the rapier's thrusting method of inflicting wounds is potentially more lethal than most of the cuts that a short sword would inflict. That said, the sword and buckler were definately superior on the medieval battlefield than the rapier due to the compressed space of that type of fighting. Sadly, both weapons are inferior to firearms wich are the real reason both rapier and sword and buckler styles faded from public use.
For purely dueling purposes I agree that the rapier in well trained hands is one of the hardest things to beat, but it is nonetheless beatable by shorter weapons with the right tactics. Regarding lethality, yes thrusting can be more deadly when aimed correctly, but Silver's point was that a rapier can also inflict a lot of wounds that neither kill nor even slow the other fighter down much, whereas deep cuts will usually disable whatever limb they hit and stop the fight a lot more often, with or without killing. Point control with a rapier can be pretty difficult against a resisting opponent, and it's easy to stab everything except your intended target sometimes against a vigorous defense. Cutting can be a little more forgiving in that respect. We've had this discussion before on other threads in more detail, so I won't drag it out here.
Regarding the advantage of greater endurance, I would claim that's actually false. First, rapiers often weren't any lighter that cutting swords and were sometimes in fact heavier. The thicker spine and greater length of the blade makes up for the lack of width, and the more complex hilts with elaborate cages can add considerable weight. I've handled rapiers that were so well balanced that they
felt lighter than they really were, but I can say the same for cutting swords as well. Also, I have experience with both rapier and sword and buckler, and personally I find the intense, mostly linear lunging style of rapier to be significantly more tiring than sword and buckler. S&B is a more symmetrical, well-rounded style that uses more different muscle groups which can allow each other precious seconds to rest and recover. Rapier and dagger evens things up a little bit, but still places a much heavier burden on the sword arm and corresponding forward leg. I find longsword less tiring than rapier or sidesword for the same reason - the muscular burden is more evenly distributed around the body, so no one part gets fatigued too quickly due to overuse, despite the obviously larger weapon. You might be able to make a case for smallsword (on which modern epee is based), but even there my observation still applies.