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Eddie Smith wrote:...if it is the case that curved swords cut better and single edge swords can be sharper?
Eddie Smith wrote:...that Europeans as a whole generally chose long, straight, double-edge swords, if it is the case that curved swords cut better and single edge swords can be sharper?
Stewart Sackett wrote:A straight, double edged blade offers greater versatility due to the ability to cut with the false/back edge. Also Europeans wore armour.
The curvature of Japanese swords is a necessary design element that compensates for the poor quality of Japanese iron/steel. If the Feudal Japanese had access to better minerals they probably would have ended up with swords more like those of Medieval Europe.
Eddie Smith wrote:...that Europeans as a whole generally chose long, straight, double-edge swords, if it is the case that curved swords cut better and single edge swords can be sharper?
I. Hartikainen wrote:The Japanese sword is also held differently from an European one, leading to different options in the initial draw where the curve helps, as suggested by Ray.
Why the swords don't have a crossguard, my opinion is that in the proper use of the sword a long crossguard is not really that necessary, and it's function, in a sense, is cultural and aesthetic. If you look at the treatises, the techniques that rely on / utilize the crossguard either defensively or offensively are not that many. The blade provides for both the defense and the offense.
When the protection is needed from blades sliding down against the edge, even a tsuba is protection enough.
The art of the sword most likely developed out from the use of a stick, which, by nature, doesn't have any protection for the hand.
- Ilkka
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