I have also come to the conclusion that people did not care much about classifying thier swords in the middle ages. I think the terms varied from region to region.
I think the English called any hand and half sword a bastard sword. The Germans used the term Langenschwert which to them ment Great sword or large sword. Of course the Scotts had a diffrent idea of what a greatsword was. The Galic word for greatsword was Claymore. So things get confusing from one region to another. I have also read that the blade of a bastard sword in 1000 AD was not much longer then a one hand sword, just a longer handle. Liechtenauer wrote his manual in the early 1400's and named one of the most famous chapters Longsword . I do not think that the pointy triangle sword was in use at the time so it can not be what he was thinking about. I think the pointy style Maclaude sword pictured above, was designed 100 years later. I think that durring that period swords gradualy made the trasition to a more pointy blade as the armor got better . However the term bastard sword was in use from the time of the first crusade. I recall reading about some crusader knight talking about is childhood training at some point and he mentioned bastard sword . This makes me lean towards the idea that any hand and half sword is a bastard sword because it is a cross between a one-hand and two-hand sword, hence a bastard.


