Postby Joseph Scott » Thu Mar 16, 2006 10:52 pm
Actually Nathan, that isn't quite true for the period I am looking at. In the 18th Century/Napoleonic Era, and even sometime thereafter, most European heavy and medium cavalry (Curassiers, Carbiners, Dragoons, Horse Grenadiers) used a straight bladed broadsword, mostly basket hilted, which bears a strong resemblence to the Highland broadsword it shared the period with. Furthermore, it had become the rule since Gustavus Adolphus that the primary arm for cavalry was the sword, something reinforced by the repeated defeats of French pistol wielding cavalry by British and German horse relying on swords in the War of the Spanish Succession.
Except in unsual circumstances, heavy and medium cavalry would rely on swords as their primary weapons until the conoidial bullet of the mid-19th Century came along. Even light cavalry (who did usually use the curved sabre you refer to) only tended to use firearms for picket duty, skirmishing, and the occasional dismounted action.
Therefore sword technique was of primary importance for cavalry. It has been said that the Prussian cavalry,in the Silesian and Seven Years War often triumphed over their Austrian opponents because, though the Austrians were usually better horseman, the Prussians were better trained in swordsmanship.
Their weapons may not, thanks to the decline in martial arts, been as efficient as their Renaisance predecessors, but they were not show pieces. They were most distinctly made with the intent of violent use.
I thank you for your feedback, however, I am fairly familiar with the weapons themselves. My main concern in this thread is their method of employment, and what forms and techniques it may or may not have shared with earlier battlefield practices.