Postby David Howard » Fri Jan 10, 2014 10:25 pm
Howdy. This is my first post on here, so please forgive any errors that occur in my formatting.
I have used the battle ax in limited fashion, and I have found a number of advantages to using it. Primarily, it is much easier to acquire a quality ax than a quality sword, due to the quality metal being required only on the cutting surfaces, at the minimum. It would have been much easier to replace should it prove of inferior quality, much easier for a warrior to tend in the field, having a smaller edge to worry over, an easily replaceable gripping surface is the blade survives in fine enough shape to be remounted, and the wedge shape of the edge is much less prone to damage than the sword. It has primarily seen service with warriors who cannot afford a sword, or as mentioned, with warriors dealing with shields.
The battle ax deals damage as both a bladed edge, and a shaped bludgeon, by design. When the edge fails to bite, as with flesh, the bludgeoning effect would carry through protective measures, more so than a sword, due to balance and design. Even when compared to a sword of equal weight, of which most axes through history have been lighter than contemporary swords, if my understanding rings true. In possessing an edge, when used in a bludgeoning role, the edge can provide a better "bite" or contact with the target, which would better transfer the energy of the blow.
Axes also have their own trips and disarms, their own warding techniques. They can manipulate shields, weapons, and yes, they do serve a multifunctional role with camp chores. They hit HARD. You can adjust your hand up and down the haft, to achieve everything from maximum range to a blades knuckle duster. Anything more specific than that will require a given ax design versus a given armor and situation.