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Jonathan Harton wrote:Hey guys,
I'm working on some research that requires me to look into the historiography of the past opinions of scholars on the evolution of Medieval weapons and armour. Having always been directed towards those scholars who are now widely considered to have gotten things right, Oakeshott, David Nicolle, Alan Williams, etc, I have found myself in the strange but problematic position of not knowing where the old myths of clumsy medieval warriors weighed down by armour, with little definable martial talent, and with heavy swords, etc originated.
I know a lot of these myths are due to the ignorence of 18th and 19th century writers, but which specific texts and authors the were major players in these myths becoming the accepted truth?
Thanks for the help,
Jonathan.
s_taillebois wrote:Concerning academics and the art of the sword. Fairly few practice any of these arts, and as noted if they'd seen any at all it does tend to be either epee/foil or theatrical fencing.
Another factor which shifts perceptions, are conditions within much of current academic culture. Generally, the academic culture can tend to be very hoplophobic, to the point that too much overt interest in weapons and arts attendent...would subject anyone who studies such for their own merits, to implied censure and even failure. As a result, for those who follow the hoplophobic manner, it is a form of obtuse moral superiority implied when they state that the sword arts were little more than simplistic gross movements using large iron bars which were wielded by hirsute and illiterate barbarians.
Implication of course being, these academics are much more civilized than the distance dead about which they study or discourse.
Hard to explain it fully, but within the general academic culture, the serious study of weapons and arts, is oft something those who practice have to be careful about revealing. Weird given that the art of the sword was an aspect of many learned men...
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