Sal Bertucci wrote:So, any relation to Ivo Steven?
Yeah, ancestor. Married into a Saxon family (Earl Leofric's) after the conquest, not sure if it was entirely consensual as it was a weird time. But some high status Saxons did marry Normans as a matter of policy to try to indirectly keep some of their lands.
Staffs, the English valued them quite highly, even to the point that some of the aristocracy trained with them. And centuries later Silver et al certainly praised staff fighting.
There may have been a pyschological element to the effectiveness or non-effectiveness of the staff however....basically a yeomans or a peasants weapon. The lower orders could be very violent (not the haplessly beaten down people as often portrayed) and so might have used staffs with some effectiveness and savagery. And at least in England a far number of the yeomanry had been part of the wars in France. But it would seem very difficult to consistently match a staff agaisnt the impact and speed of a lance, or the plate armored knights protection, sword, pollaxe etc when on foot.
However the upper classes unequivocally had status weapons, better training, and certainly better nutrition.
Probably the best example of this disparity would be the English peasants revolt. Initially they caught the elites off guard, and using bows, bills, daggers and staffs (and some swords/Falchions but likely no lances*) made a mess of things.
But in the reprisals after the murder of Tyler (during negotiations) the yeomanry were generally slaughtered.
*There were some lower echelon aristocrats in the peasants revolt, Sir John Raven for example, and some members of the elite trade class.