OK, one bit at a time!
Weapon evolution - as far as I can see evolution in any area has rarley been a straight line, niether do I suggest that evolution means better, personally I much prefer the earlier fighting stlyes which are perhaps not quite so "formalised" (OK I don't know to much about later fighting styles to compare accurately, but all this talk of timings and such is beyond my comprehension, a fight should flow with the rythm of the moment -
before and
after is about as much as I can handle when someones trying to hit me! <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" /> )
I also haven't been to clear on period or location either.
At the present my research has been limited to post Norman England stopping somewhere in the early 1500's.
I can't comment too much on European stuff and when it comes down to it I haven't really investigated too much in the English stuff yet either.
These are theories I'm looking at due to the archaeological research I've done, and without being funny archaeological material isn't bias, it can be interpreted in a bias manner but so can any document which, having been written by a human being is inately bias (we all have opinions and we all know we are right <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" /> )
Archaeology
Towton shows lots of guys were killed with blows to the back of the head.
Wisby shows that lots of the guys were hit to the back, and quite commonly the back of the head.(I've not looked at this myself yet but I'll take my dissertation supervisors word for it)
Fishergate, York 1150-1500 shows lots of injuries to the back of the head, about the same % as Towton.
Fishergate, York c.800-1150 shows lots of guys hit in the rear, not so much focused on the back of the head but c.75% into the back of the head and back of the spine.
Saxon England source
http://www.geocities.com/stillers_1999/Dissertation.html#TRAUMATIC HEAD. Ok this only looks at cranial injuries but most of those go to the back of the head.
The point I'm trying to make is that Historians have always presumed it is
common sense that past armies fought in a manner we are familiar with, however the archaeology seems to say something quite different! This wouldn't be the first time archaeology has proved historians wrong.
I'll see if John doesn't mind putting my diss in the research area for a wee while (I can't put it out perminantly as I'm hoping to publish and Uni wont be too impressed if I've made it available for free)
(sorry I've had 3/4 of a bottle of wine and I'm losing where I am
<img src="/forum/images/icons/crazy.gif" alt="" /> , so I appologise now for the disjointed flow of points.)
England post 1400 should not be compared or included with the rest of Europe, we did things quite different after then, "hammered on the anvils of different gravities" if you get what I mean.
I'm not saying that they didn't use lines or any concept of formation, just that it may not be quite what we have been led to presume, like a lot of history. eg the French call the English "rost beouf" because of our tradition of eating loads of beef, funny considering it was a habit we developed from the Gauls during the Roman occupation.
I'm not saying I have all the answers, just there is enough flaws in the argument between the history and the archaeology for us to start re-assessing the medieval ways of combat, and I'll be blown if I'm going to let the archaeologists tell me that pre renaissance fighting was random violence because of hits to the posterior aspect of the skeleton.
I'll probably look at this in the morning and regret it, but hay what was alcohol designed for if it wasn't to make you open your mouth and stick you foot in it!
Steve