Postby JeanryChandler » Tue Feb 04, 2003 2:35 pm
I enjoyed reading your article and I tend to take the same side in debates between "modern" fencers versus historical fencing techniques and historical weapons. But I have to play the devils advocate here and point out something which I think you may have missed (though please pardon me if I didn't read carefully enough and just missed this in your piece)
It seems though that you left out the main reason for the continued use of cutting and particularly, curved slashing weapons by the military in the 18th and 19th Century. I may be wrong here, because this is a conclusion I've reached myself through observation and not backed up by any specific academic source, and I don't have an advanced degree in History or anything, but I always assumed that slashing weapons with a certain shape and overall design, were cavalry weapons, because they were most suitible for cavalry, and historically they seemed to have been most associated with cavalry. By the 18th and especially 19th centuries, armor is obsolete, guns dominate the battlefield, and really the only widespread use of swords as primary military weapons (as opposed to backup / ceremonial use by officers) is by cavalry fighting from horseback.
Certain design characteristics, including a curved blade and a specific type of angled handle, seem to lend themselves to use by cavalry. I'm thinking, if you are riding through an enemy infantry formation at full gallop, you don't want to impale someone with a sword even if it is a more efficient way to penetrate armor and rib cages, because you may have trouble getting it out again. A lance you can leave behind if it got stuck in a target, (and cavalry soldiers often carried three lances for this purpose) the sword was the backup when you used up your lances, and in any event you certainly wouldn't want to leave it behind. The curved shape of the typical single edged swords used by cavalry (and most swords of this type, with a few exceptions such as the Flachion family and the Kopis / Falcata were used by cavalry) lends itself well to slashing at an opponent while riding by, and probably assisted in weapon retention, as did the curved handle one often sees in cavalry sabers dating from 12th century mongol weapons to 19th century American military swords. (Interestingly, a similar curved handle was present on a lot of Kopis / Falcata that I've seen as well)
On the other hand, I can also think of an argument why a saber or a back-sword would be a better military weapon than a rapier or a small sword: a heavier slashing and cutting weapon would be better in active defense, especially against heavy weapons such as for example a bayonetted musket or rifle. It wouldnt be that easy to parry a musket with a backsword but I would truly hate to be in the position of trying to parry a musket with a smallsword or an epee or something like that!
Just a few thoughts.
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger