Postby Steve Thurston » Thu Nov 27, 2003 4:46 pm
Good points and I have answers to some aspects.
I don't intend to prove the existance, only the potential for existance. Archaeology is never going to be able to tell you exactly what happened, just what might have been. Occupational markers on trained fighters are probably likely.
"To the best of my knowledge, at this point in time we are not even able to state what type of weapon created a given cut on any bone"
- as far as I have seen so far most of the research seems to be one of two ways. 1st, hack at pigs with different weapons and see what happens or, 2nd, look at the archaeological record and see if you can spot any similiarities with skeletal populations. If the two talked to each other they may start getting somewhere, but its rare if its outhere. If as further research one was to produce a database of cuts conforming to a common 'style' (as no better word) it might be possible to see a trend or pattern in the signatures left by each strike. This could then be compared to the archaeological record with a greater chance of being able to islolate potential instances of trained fighting. Also need to look at cemetary graves more than battlefield stuff as a greater abundance of data from which to draw conclusion.
"Does a cut by a master look any different from a "lucky" cut by an unskilled swordsman?"
- This is why I was asking for tales of test cutting. I had a go at test cutting with a guy called Oz. I was supprised to see that my sword did not cut a straight clean line thru' the plastic bottle as I had expected. Oz said that this was common and that associates of his who had more experience than he and could cut straighter, on comparison Oz's cut was straighter than my own. If this was so, and common to other individuals, it might be possible to determine a certain level of skill of the individual whom executed the blow.
"In bone, can you tell the difference between a false edge Zwerchhau and a true edge cross cut?"
I might be able to tell you in 6 months with more confidence, however, I think so. <img src="http://www.thearma.org/forum/images/icons/confused.gif" alt="" />
Its going to take a lot of research before there is any real chance of me finding anything that constitues real evidence. Hopefully I can show that waving a sword in the direction of a piece of meat and hoping it does some damage is not reflective of real events, and that should do for a Bsc and give me plenty of questions to answer later. <img src="http://www.thearma.org/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" />
Steve