Here comes the flak... <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" />
I'd be interested to see any documentation on guys having to straighten their blades and then to continue fighitng with them? I could possibly understand them getting messed up and having a smith fix them later. I really dont think that they were that thin. Many viking era blades have a wide, deep, fuller running the legnth of the sword- a feature that would not be present in such a thin, bendable blade.
http://www.albion-swords.com/swords/albion/nextgen/sword-viking-vinland.htm (see also Petersen's typology of viking swords)
The tips on viking swords were a bit more rounded than what we might see on a late 14th cent longsword, but they certainly are sharp and very capable of a thrust. That combined with a wide, thick ricasso, plus a shorter blade that most of the later single hand types, make it a very formidable and effective weapon.
"Fancy sword duels" never existed anywhere as far as I'm concerned. Anytime duels were done in earnest, it is never about being "fancy", it's about being fast, effective and brutal. The Vikings did have a very formal system of organized dueling where the combatants would fight. There are some versions where they were stripped to the waist, some where they had 3 shields and a few spears with them- I seem to recall one where there was a special small island they went to, to fight and only one would be able to come ashore. I'm at work and dont have my texts on me do document, but I'll try to get my sources when I get home.
Yes it was simple and effective, but so is every other efficient form of combat.
"Why is there a picture of a man with a sword in his head on your desk?" -friends inquiry