Postby JeanryChandler » Sun Nov 28, 2004 10:55 am
I did a lot of research into this for a book I was working on for a role playing game.
I looked at surviving messers and falchions at museums, places like "myarmoury.com" and on numerous auction sites on the net. I found 26 messers and 14 falchions, ranging from the 13th century to the 17th (most were 15th or 16th century). The messers were always longer, usually at least 36" in overall length) and had more narrow blades, and longer guards, and usually have some kind of knuckleguard, often shaped like a clamshell or sometimes just a ring.
The falchions ranged from fairly thin to ridiculously wide (like the famous Conyers falchion allegedly used to slay the Sockbyrn 'wyrm' in the 13th century) to fairly narrow. Over time they seemed to make them shorter and shorter, until they became almost like little cutlasses. Falchions were made until the 17th century at least.
There are several woodcuts depicting messers used two handed, though I'm not sure about in the fechtbuchs.
So IMO there is more difference than just the pommels, but a lot of people dont agree with me.
I know John C. is working on an essay about Falchions which should clear a lot of this up.
Jeanry
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger