Benjamin Parker wrote:Can anyone tell me anything about how one would fight with a mace?

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Hi Benjamin,
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I just came across your request and so am posting an interesting piece on uing the mace. The piece was supplied to me by a friend and IIRC the original is held at the British Library. I also published this over at SFI.
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Best wishes,
Terry Brown.
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From the Nihayat al-su?l wa-l-umniyya fi ta?lim a?mal al-furusiyya
THE FIFTH LESSON ON THE USE OF THE MACE
In this lesson there are many useful points which are not found
elsewhere, and there are also questions and answers.
The man who uses a mace does not have to fear it breaking or
becoming blunt, as in the case of the sword. He can strike with it as
and where he likes, as he can with stones or pieces of wood or iron and
so forth, unlike in the use of other weapons.
Question: Where is the mace carried on the saddle?
Answer: On the right side. Horsemen of old used
to put it on the left of the saddle, but the right is
better.
Question: How does the mace-bearer strike a blow with
his mace?
Answer: He strikes a sideways blow with it so that it
does not slip from his hand and injure either his mount
or himself.
Question: Where should he strike his enemy with his
mace?
Answer: He should strike a man on his nose. If he is
unable to do this then he should strike the forehead.
If this is impossible, then on his right upper arm if he
is on the right side, or his left upper arm if he is on
the left. Alternatively, he should strike the front of
his horse?s head, on the forelock, or if that is
impossible on the front of one of its shoulders.
Question: What does the mace-bearer do when he
meets the bearer of any other weapons?
Answer: He can breal lances, swords, bows, or
shields. He can smash helmets, forearms, thighs,
and trunks, and he can shatter bones. He can
also throw his mace at the horseman or his horse,
or at the footsoldiers. Or he can do whatever occurs
to him.
Question: Where does the horseman hold his mace when
he has withdrawn it from its suspensory strap before an
encounter?
Answer: He holds it between his hands on the saddle,
in the centre part of the saddle between himself and the pommel.
Question: How should the footsoldier hold his mace in an
encounter?
Answer: He should lay it on his left forearm gripping it with
his right hand and with his shield in his left hand, in the same
way as a sword.
Question: When is it appropriate for the footsoldier to hold
his mace vertical?
Answer: He should hold it thus (Note 1), as we mentioned
concerning the sword, on passing between ranks of troops
and in the presence of kings and sultans.
Question: How should the mace be thrown?
Answer: The mace-bearer should take hold of it at the grip
withthe head of the mace held away from the body and lift
the hand until it is level with the shoulder. Then he should
stretch out his hand to full extent so that the weight (Note 2)
of his mace may have more effect.
Question: How heavy should a mace be?
Answer: Its weight should not be beyond the strength of
the man carrying it so that he can weild it effectively. I have
heard it said by friends who fought in campaigns against
against the Unbelievers that a mace should weigh 150
dirhams (Note 3). That is a good weight; a mace may be
less than that but not more.
Note 1
There is a further word in the text apparently describing
how the mace is held, in addition to ?vertical?. It is from the same
root as ?passing? in the next line, but its exact sense in this context
is obscure.
Note 2
This is the apparent sense of the word given in the text which
literally means ?mercy? and which I assume to be a miscopy (not uncommon in this Ms).
Note 3
In modern Egypt a dirham is about 3.12 grams. For twelfth
century Syria it was apparently about 3.14 grams (see W. Hinz: Islamische Masse und Gewichte, Handbuch der Orientalistik, Leiden 1955). 150 dirhams
would thus equate to about 470 grams.