Postby Steve Thurston » Tue May 11, 2004 4:37 am
Hi there!
And thanks to all who completed the on-line questionnaire!
Unfortunately I did not get a chance to do anything on activity markers in my dissertation but I will hopefully be writing something on activity markers in the next couple of months.
What I did do in my diss was produce a model for sharp-force trauma based on long sword techniques in Ringeck, Liectenauer, Vadi, Codex Wallerstein and Talhoffer 1467.
The method of footwork I used in the interpretation of these was a method similar to that taught to me by Oz based on Silver.
The best way I can describe the footwork is to give an example (Its not mentioned in any of the text explicitly but it may be well known to experienced WMAs)
Starting in Vom Tag (Ringecks) on the right side with the left foot forward. As the opponent starts his attack place the left foot infront of the right, toes pointing towards the opponent. Then conduct the attack as normal and this brings you to the opponents side and allows attacks to the rear.
In my interpretation this can be used in most, if not all, attacks as well as a decent number of counter-attacks.
I used this to analyse the manuals statistically cataloging the different blows in the manuals covered as attacks to the Head (& neck), upper quarter, radius, ulna and lower quarter. The head was then subdivided into the anterior (front), lateral (sides) and posterior (back), the only manual I could do this for was Ringeck (Tobler pics made it easier as well!).
When I had done this I worked out the average and used this as the predictive model which was then compared to archaeological data. The most common attack in the manual were to the back of the head on the left side.
St Andrews Cemetary, York.
I couldn't do a full comparison as the texts on the cemetary didn't give enough detail, however the later period, 1150-1500AD displayed a pretty good match with the model. The earlier stuff displayed a similarity as many of the attacks went to the rear but the focus in this period was the upper quarter not the head.
Towton
The details in Blood Red Roses were good enough to do a full statistical analysis and direct comparison to my model, so I did!
This showed a really good match, less than 10% variation from my model. Not bad considering the stuff in the manuals is theory compared to the real fighting of the battlefield.
I've also developed some tradition markers as well.
Horizontal blows to the face or forehead caused by 'crooked cuts' or 'cross strikes' among others. There were a good half dozen of these at Towton.
I also suggested that multiple superficial wounds to the lateral aspects of the head were potential indicators, espeacially if there was a substantial wound to the back of the head. Yet again Towton has about a half dozen of these.
Anyway this showed that many of those at Towton were trained with, what I have termed, the Higher Medieval Martial Arts Tradition. (I have noticed that some are not happy with the use of the term tradition, however, during the period it was a tradition hence its use in the study) and that the majority were familiar with the basic principles, if not the "secrets" depicted in the manuals.
I also did some research into military frameworks for the Higher Medieval period(1380-1600AD), this was pretty hard, nobody's done too much research in this area so I had to start with the feudal system and develop the idea with reference to the changing social structure based in the towns.
I did finaly create a model for the higher framework and came up 8.37% of the 500,000 men of fighting age being trained with the explicit techniqes depicted in the manuals, c.40,000 men in England alone, western Europe followed a more feudal structure for a lot longer that England so I would surmise that fewer people were trained, although the armies themselves would be bigger than the English forces.
I'm not sure what you'll all think of this as my interpretation seems somewhat different from many of the published works such as Tobler but I should be getting it published in an acraelogical journal according to my supervisor.
Again thanks to all those who helped with the online questionnaire, it was much appreciated
Steve