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John wrote:I've always been interested in medieval combat, but once thing I've never understand was how lances were used. I know that they were used in jousts, but how were they used in the battlefield? They seem big and heavy. I know calvary used it, but how were they used? From my observations of jousting, they look like they could only be used once in a battle, during the charge, and then had to be discarded. Could they have been used for melee combat as well?
LafayetteCCurtis wrote:
BTW, I sort of doubt Wright's assertion that the "lances" were lighter than spears. This is probably just a misinterpretation born out of the Victorian tendency to translate the Greek and Latin words for spear-like weapons indiscriminately as "lance" or "spear," with the result that we see many warriors fighting on foot while throwing their "lances" in translations of such works as the Iliad.
And it might be true that withdrawing a lance from a dead enemy while speeding along on a galloping horse might require great skill, but wouldn't this skill have been an essential part of a man-at-arms's training at that time? We clearly have literary evidence that Norman lances were used for both throwing and thrusting.
philippewillaume wrote:Contus= long lance about 10-12 feet or more, this is the lance used by cataphracts (Byzantine, Sarmatian, Alan, Goth and so on) and possibly by Alexander companions.
An evolution of that is the medieval heavy lance.
John wrote:I've always been interested in medieval combat, but once thing I've never understand was how lances were used. I know that they were used in jousts, but how were they used in the battlefield? They seem big and heavy. I know calvary used it, but how were they used? From my observations of jousting, they look like they could only be used once in a battle, during the charge, and then had to be discarded. Could they have been used for melee combat as well?
LafayetteCCurtis wrote:No, not off-topic at all--though the use of the lance on the battlefield seems to have had some important differences from its use on the jousting lists, at least if we can consider Dom Duarte to be a reliable source (and I think we can).
LafayetteCCurtis wrote:philippewillaume wrote:Contus= long lance about 10-12 feet or more, this is the lance used by cataphracts (Byzantine, Sarmatian, Alan, Goth and so on) and possibly by Alexander companions.
An evolution of that is the medieval heavy lance.
I'd strongly dispute the idea of an evolutionary link between the kontos (a word that originally meant "oar" or "barge pole;" the Greeks used it to refer to the lance's extreme length) and the medieval lance. They were both used as charging weapons, but the Roman/Parthian/Sarmatian kontos was so long that it had to be wielded in two hands and the method of gripping it seems to have been more of an underarm one than couched in the armpit. The late-medieval heavy lance is more likely to have descended from the one-handed lances in widespread use among the heavy horsemen of the Romano-Germanic successor states in Western Europe.
Not to mention that Alexander's companions didn't use the kontos, but the shorter eight-foot xyston wielded in one hand. .
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