Postby James Brazas » Wed Jul 03, 2013 8:25 pm
Joseph Swetnam, Paulus Hector Mair, Albrecht Durer, and George Silver all have a decent amount about how to fight against a different weapon from your own.
Silver and Swetnam cover staff vs. sword. (Staff and spear are used almost exactly the same.) Swetnam especially seems to like the staff vs. sword-and-dagger or staff vs. rapier-and-dagger.
Silver also covers "short sword" vs. rapier (Silver's "short sword" being a military cut-and-thrust sword, or "sidesword").
Durer has some Longsword vs. Messer material. (The Messer is the "Great Knife" of Medieval Germany. It's a knife so big that it's basically a sword - a curved, single-edged, one-handed sword optimized for cutting.)
Mair has a smattering of different matchups between various polearms and swords. The weapons include spears, pollaxes, longswords, sideswords, and dussacks (basically a cutlass). Unfortunately, I'm not sure if an English translation is available of that section of Mair's manual. Mair's manual is absolutely gigantic, so it's often translated in pieces.
(As a sidenote, if anyone knows of a place where you can get Paulus Hector Mair's entire manual in English, please let me know. I have access to English versions of specific sections, but not the whole thing.)
As has been said before, the most common dissimilar matchup is unarmed vs. dagger. There are also a few unarmed vs. sword techniques here and there. I can't remember every manual I've seen them, but I've been going through Lechuckner's Messer manual lately. I remember Leckuchner had some unarmed vs. Messer techniques in his Messer manual.
It's usually only a few techniques here and there - so nothing exhaustive or too terribly detailed.
Most of the manuals will teach longsword vs. longsword, pollaxe vs. pollaxe, etc. It allows you to learn both how to use the weapon and how to fight against the weapon. So a skilled fighter who has learned, say, the longsword would know good ways to defeat the longsword as well.
Using a different weapon than your opponent changes up the advantages and disadvantages, of course. Yet if you have trained in both weapons, presumably you would be able to figure the rest out.
Plus, there are the occasional passages in the manuals that teach specific techniques or tactics to fight in dissimilar weapon matches.
And as has been said before, duels were almost always between two weapons of the exact same type. So dissimilar weapons training would normally be for either war or when you are spontaneously attacked by someone who happens to have a different weapon.
Most masters spend the vast majority of their time exploring the possibilities of each weapon rather than raking them as "better/worse" or building some sort of elaborate "rock, paper, scissors" arrangement. But there was one master who delved into the subject a great deal: George Silver. He was rather opinionated and often didn't agree with the Italian and Spanish masters (who loved the rapier, a weapon that Silver looked down on), but Silver was a very good fighter and well-trained in virtually every weapon you could ask for. So even though his ranking system was controversial, it's at least based on the experience of a life-long swordsman.
Basically, it went like this:
Sword ("short sword" or "sidesword") > Rapier
Sword and Dagger > Sword alone
Sword and Target (large round steel shield strapped to the arm) > Sword and Dagger
Sword and Buckler (small steel shield held in the fist) > Sword and Target
Two-Hand Sword > Sword and Buckler
Pollaxe/Halberd > Two-Hand Sword
Spear/Forest Bill > Pollaxe/Halberd
He also mentions that, in tight quarters and dense battles, that he especially recommends the two-hand sword, sword-and-target, or pollaxe.