I was recently looking through the I.33 manuscript in the Research and Reading section of this site and my question has to do with this bit of text which is not in the manuscript, but I assume an editorial.
"The manual is good source (and among the very few) for how dynamic the Medieval sword & buckler style was, and how it both relates to and contrasts from the later Renaissance form. The Medieval sword & buckler is used in a similar but not identical manner to those often more slender blades of the later Renaissance (which employs wrist cuts, slices, and a wider rang of footwork). The Medieval sword & buckler was a popular means of settling disputes in civilian situations."
I am curious as to some of the major differences this text is talking about between Medieval and Rennaissance sword and buckler. I can visualize the similarities. I assume this to include the medieval arming sword and the rennaissance cut & thrust sword. If it is refering to the rapier and buckler then I already know the immediate differences/similarities.
This could also be asked. Is there any major difference between the rennaissance cut & thrust sword and the medieval arming sword? I haven't really trained with either.
Thanks.
