I've long thought that the Dueling Shield/Longshield was fascinating. It's somewhere between a large shield, a staff, and a spear in how it's wielded. It even functions something like a revolving door at times. It's just a highly unusual and multi-faceted weapon.
Yet I've been told that it was never used in warfare (and obviously not for civilian self-defense due to its size) and its use was restricted to judicial duels.
I can think of a few reasons as to why that might be, but I'd be curious to hear others' opinions.
Was it ever used outside of a judicial duel? Perhaps as a tool for a guard? Certainly, it would block off passageways well and could be turned to let others pass.
Why would it be used in Judicial Duels?
It just seems strange to me that they would ever spend the time and money to develop such a marvelously outlandish weapon, write so much on the topic, and yet never use it either for war or civilian self-defense.
Why all the effort if the weapons' usefulness was only in the dueling ring?
This would seem to make the longshield unique. All of the other weapons I've seen in the manuals saw significant use as battlefield weapons, civilian self-defense weapons, or both. Even Meyer's improvised weapons section has obvious practicality.
The longshield seems to be a riddle.
