Postby Patrick Hardin » Fri Aug 20, 2004 12:56 pm
Sword and dagger is fine for fighting an unarmored opponent one-on-one, where you've got plenty of room to step and maneuver. In the press of the battle, however, there just isn't room to use the sword and dagger together effectively. Understand also that infantry in all periods fought in certain formations. They would either all be equipped with shields, sometimes to protect their neighbor as well as themselves, or they would all be using larger two-handed weapons like pikes, spears, axes, hammers, etc. I've never heard of an army that used infantry that fought with sword and dagger. As for knights on horseback, who would really be the ones using the kind of sword you are thinking about, they would either have to have a shield to protect their left side, or their plate armor would do it for them. In any case, it's VERY hard to fight with a dagger from horesback. Daggers on the medieval battlefield were mainly for finishing off the dying, or for killing captives that could pay no ransom. The sword was often used for the same purposes. The only other time a dagger would be used in battle would be as the absolute last resort, after all other weapons, including the sword, had been lost. I'm sure it could have come to that often, though.
As for fighting an armored opponent, if you both have arming swords and daggers at your disposal, and nothing else, you need your left hand free to halfsword and grapple. Once you've gotten your armored opponent to the ground, maybe broken one or two of his bones, and pinned him well enough, then you draw your dagger to work into the openings of his armor, or drive through the links of his mail to finish him off. Most manuals that cover armored fighting show something of this kind.
Patrick Hardin
"Few men are born brave. Many become so through training and force of discipline."
---Vegetius