Jonathan_Kaplan wrote:Person 1, on the greatsword:
Well, there's the greatsword, and then there's the great sword. What you seem to be discussing here is the Renaissance two-handed sword and, while it's known as the "greatsword" in popular culture due to the influence of fantasy roleplaying games, more historically-focused discussions tend to use the word/phrase "great sword" for a different kind of weapon: long-handled cut-oriented blades of the Oakeshott types XIIa and XIIIa, mostly about the same size and weight as more thrust-oriented longswords although with a somewhat different paradigm of handling and balance.
"Because its a horrible weapon. At its length you can't actually do a full single point thrust (one or two handed) and for swinging you only get about 1/2 it length for actual reach, thus forcing ineffiecent slashes, and draw cuts. Its only nice in theory, the minute its starts to get on paper physics comes in and says this is a horrible weapon idea. "
You could tell this bloke to look at the relative dimensions of blade and handle in two-handed swords. A longsword (or its earlier cousin, the greatsword) seldom has the handle taking up more than one-fifths of the entire weapon's length. On the other hand, the handle on a two-handed sword easily makes up one-fourths or even one-thirds of the weapon's entire length, giving a greater leverage to help control the weapon's greater mass. This is how the weapon remains manageable despite its sheer size, although of course it's still not going to be as fast or as agile as a smaller longsword.
"1. The cruciform form of the straight sword was developed for the Crusades and more for religous reasons than for practical ones. At which point you get a standing symbol.
This is BS. Any historical martial artists who has spent a while studying reconstructed medieval European martial arts alongside other sword arts that do not use the cruciform sword design (or switching from the former to the latter) would find that the long, prominent cross on medieval European swords plays a really important role in protecting the hands and controlling the enemy's weapon. At least I'd be very reluctant to try things like Absetzen or Duplieren without a substantial cross.
2. Renaissance era plate was advanced enough that a sword simply was not getting the job done, thus the development of more focused weapons like the battle axes and war hammers. The sword's time was roughly the middle dark ages when every one was in simple chain mail.
This argument completely misses the point because the horribly misnamed "Dark Ages" as well as the Early and High Medieval periods also had its own "more focused weapon": the spear in its various forms. Not to mention that there was never any shortage of dedicated chopping/crushing weapons apart from swords; the Dane Axe was around long before plate armour (apart from helmets) became popular, the Maciejowski Bible is chock full of all sorts of choppers and bludgeons, and let's not forget that the lobated/knobbed mace never really fell out of use since the Bronze Age.
3. The halberd, the simple common infantry weapon, yeah that took less time to forge, less time to train, had longer effective reach, same utility (poke, chop, hook, etc.) and was more useful one defense and in formation.
Well, depending on what kind of sword is being discussed, it should be noted that many later halberdiers (from the late 15th century onwards) also carried short swords as a backup. It's not one or the other; if one could have both, why carry just one?
If the discussion is to be restricted to the two-handed sword, however, there may be some cultural factors at work. For example, the Imperials (particularly the Landsknechts) seem to have favoured the two-handed swords for certain roles that the Swiss would have assigned to halberdiers instead. But then, the Swiss had their own two-handed swordsmen too, and it's not surprising that they tend to be assigned to one nice that was also the particular province of the two-handed swordsmen in Imperial service: guarding the colours. In this respect, the two-handed swordsmen would likely go into action when the rest of the formation had been shaken or broken up by the enemy assault, and the intimidation factor presented by their massive swords might be quite important in helping them stem the tide of the enemy's attack and buy time for everybody else to rally, regroup, and come back into the fight, preferably before the colours had been captured.
"Basically, take all of the advantages of wielding a Glaive (not a Glaive-Guisarme, which is better because of the design to rip people off mounts).
And extend the blade to below where your main hand should be.
Now you have a Greatsword.
Again, missing the point since a glaive (assuming that this means a long knife-blade at the end of a pole) doesn't have the mass or the sheer impact force of the two-handed sword....
Longswords/Bastardswords, the 1.5 handed weapons were useful. the full fledged 2hr Greatsword was not, as it sacrificed the strength of being a Greataxe, Glaive, Spear, halberd, or Pike for being a bigass sword. Swords may be cool, but they are not a practical twohander design. "
There's some point to this, but some others in this thread have shown you that the Renaissance two-handed sword was not (and never) a general-purpose weapon in the manner of earlier longswords. It was a specialist weapon primarily intended for guarding the colours/standards at the centre of a pike formation, plus a few other tasks similar to those of contemporary halberdiers (things like forming up a flying squad to assault the flank of an enemy pike formation that was already engaged to its front). Therefore it didn't need to match the longsword's versatility and could concentrate on things that it was really good at (in the opinions of contemporary fencing masters, this largely involved fighting against multiple enemies at once).
BTW, the mention of "greataxe" is another thing that makes me think that the discussion is couched in the terminology of Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition -- which is not a bad game in itself, but
not something one should rely on for historical weapon nomenclature.