Allen Johnson wrote:Found our viking source for two swords.
It's from the Droplaugarsona Saga.
"Grim had two swords, because Gaus knew how to blunt sword edges. Grim fought equally well with both hands. He raised one sword with his left hand and struck with the right at Gaus, taking off one of his legs above the knee. Now Gaus fell down and in that moment swung his sword at Grim so that it hit his leg, making more of a shearing than a biting wound. Now the Viking ran away, but Grim took the silver and acquired great renown from this deed."
It is unusual that someone can fight equally well in both hands. Note that he still was injured enough to take him away from the fight despite the two swords.
Egils saga describes someone carrying two swords to a duel. One in a scabbard and one in his hands. Multiple shields were common as well at these duels as ones became too chopped up to use.
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Aha! Thank you for this quote---and there is the key----it may be unusual and difficult for most people, but some us either are ambidextrous or have trained to be so and therefore are comfortable with case of 'anything' in fact. So, rather than dismiss an idea for lack of evidence, train hard and discover whether you have the ability to cope with the movements necessary to make it work. I have and I succeed rather well against any combination.
Please remember that the rarity of such skill probably precluded any formal inclusion of such material within valuable manual space, and also that we have only a tiny fraction of potential representative manuals. It is not a mistake to think outside of a box, only to continue after the theory is actually proven to be flawed.
cheers
