Postby JeanryChandler » Sat Nov 01, 2003 7:53 pm
It's use was probably incorporated with special tactics, tactics which may have gone back to the dark ages and previously, as with the Swiss forest cantons with their halberds. Yeah, it's "just a long club" with a spike on the end, but a halberd is "just a long axe" on with a few extra pointy thingies added on.
The gudentag or gudedag was used by Flemish peasant infantry militia in several battles starting in the early 14th century, as with the Halberd it was used in conjunction with the marksmen armed with the new generation of ultra-heavy crossbows. The Flemish infantry had some success against knights when they were able to benefit from advantageous terrain and arrogantly bad tactics by their aristoctratic opponents, but they lacked the battlefield discipline and tactical flexibility of the Swiss, nor were they supported by alliances with wealthy free cities as the Swiss were, and ultimately they were put down.
JR
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger