Postby Brian Hunt » Wed Aug 24, 2005 2:44 am
I am going to make a stab at this. AFAIK,historically bucklers were made of many materials. Some were a steel frame with a hardened leather covering, some were steel or iron, and I believe some were a wood steel composite. Some were even made as faces with tongues and such, as shown in Paulus Kal. In one of Talhoffer's manuals, his bucklers are a lopsided octegon with lots of points, Mair named his buckler a "rundellen", which I believe roughly translates as a round-dagger, and is very pointed like the ones shown in Jorg Wilhalm, and some of Talhoffer's other buckler images. The I.33 shows a buckler that is domed in the center, and sometimes it has a short point illustrated, and sometimes it doesn't. Marrazo's buckler is illustrated as a domed center without a spike or point.
It is my opinion that it is unsafe to practice with a pointed buckler. These things are wonderfull brass kuckles, and if you add a point, they essentially become a large punch dagger.
Most bucklers come in a variety of sizes, from 6 inches all the way up to 16 inches in diameter. I prefer a buckler that is 12 inches in Diameter.
If you make one out of 1/2 plywood with a 16 gage umbo, you will have a nicely weighted buckler, not too heavy, not too light. I do not have any stats on period weights for a buckler, so I cannot speak about that.
For general practice and sparring, I use a 1/4 thick ABS plastic buckler that I make. It works well against wasters, steel blunts, and padded weapons.
For authenticity, I would go with a 16 gage steel buckler with a rolled edge. I have a 14 gage one that I hammered out, and it is a little on the heavy side for some of the techniques where you change from one side to the other to protect your sword hand. I would also only use a steel sword against a steel buckler, it could be devestating to a waster or a padded weapon.
A wooden buckler would also be a good general all around buckler against blunts, wasters, and padded weapons.
There are leather bucklers out there, but I have yet to use one that I trusted my knuckles to. The couple I have used, the umbo or domed section had a tendency to collapse under a solid impact and allow the force to travel to your knuckles. Others may have leather bucklers that don't do this, but I haven't personally held one. However, I have only seen about 4 leather bucklers so my opinion may be skewed.
hope this helps.
Brian Hunt
GFS
P.S. I primarily study the I.33, and Mair's rapier and buckler, with a little Lichtenauer thrown in for fun. However, there is a large similarity between the principals found in the I.33 and several of Talhoffer's buckler plates.