Postby John Farthing » Wed Sep 16, 2009 12:11 pm
I am currently doing some research in this area (including several reconstructions and experiments using the tenets of experimental archæology).
While Hans Talhoffer (among others) does offer us a glimpse at many seemingly unique weapons, many had been in use since antiquity! Their inclusion in Renaissance era fight literature is likely both a testament to their effectiveness, as well as, evidence of the humanist mentality which borrowed heavily from earlier sources.
Among weapons I have reconstructed and tested are the fustibal(us), a type of staff-sling shown to us in Talhoffer but, highly documented as having been used much earlier! Preliminary experimentation has shown this to be an effective weapon at quite noteworthy distances and, surprisingly accurate with very little practice!
I have also done a fair amount of research into the weapon mentioned above by Mr. Taylor. It is known as a 'Wurfkreuz' (lit. 'throw cross') and is, (as Mr. Taylor rightly points out) a German invention. I have, (unlike many of the aforementioned weapons), found no evidence of this weapon prior to the fifteenth century. While this weapon may seem obscure to us today, (it is still little known to most modern researchers and historians!), it seems to have commanded some respect in it's own time. No less of a personage than Leonardo Da Vinci has written of the 'German Cross' and images of it's use in combat survive in 'Freydal'!
I have worked with the Wurfkreuz a bit myself, having had a reconstruction built for me based upon my research and an extant museum example. The weapons mentioned above (as well as several others) are the subject of some ongoing investigations I currently have underway. The eventual goal will be to compile my findings, document my research in photos, etc. and publish one or more papers on these subjects. These papers will most likely be published under the auspices of the ARMA and therefore, may or may not be publicly available. In either case, I hope that I have provided some insights to your original inquiry and further whetted any subsequent appetites which might lead you to further research.
-John Farthing, Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director