Medieval
& Renaissance Sword Forms and Companion Implements
In the continuing effort to bring greater
learning and scholarship to the serious study and practice of European
weaponry, ARMA, as the premier Internet site for Medieval and Renaissance
martial arts, presents the following general definitions. This brief
list is intended to aid studnets in study and dispel some of the many
myths and misconceptions surrounding the subject.
Medieval Swords
Medieval
swords existed in great varieties over a number of centuries.
Both experimentation and specialization in design was constant.
But certain common characteristics can describe the "generic"
medieval sword as a long, wide, straight, double-edged blade with
a simple cross-guard (or "cruciform" hilt). It might be
designed for one or two-hands. The typical form was a single hand
weapon used for hacking, shearing cuts and also for limited thrusting.
This style developed essentially from Celtic, Germanic, Anglo-Saxon,
and late Roman (the spatha) forms. The Viking and early Frankish
forms (the "spata") are also considered to be more direct
ancestors. Medieval swords can be classified (typically by hilt design)
into a great many categories by curators, collectors, and military
historians. However, students & re-creationists today should prefer
the actual historical terms. At the time, long bladed weapons were
simply referred to as "swords", or for the longer ones often
a "sword of war", "war-sword" (French Espée
du Guerre or Epee du Guerre), or even a "long-sword".
Various languages might call them by schwert, svard, suerd, swerd,
espada, esapadon, or epee. When later worn on the belt by mounted
knights they might be called an Arming-sword. Arming-swords
were also considered "riding-swords" (also parva ensis
or epee courte). It is this single-hand form which is so closely
associated with the idea of the "knightly sword" (c. 1300).
The challenge of armor in the Age-of-plate, forced many blades (both
single-hand and longer) to be made narrower and pointier, but also
thicker and more rigid. Ffrom at least the late 1300s in England,
a single-hand blade of this form was referred as a "short swerde".
In 15th century Germany it was the Kurczen swert. At
this same time, as a result of the increased use of thrusting techniques
some blades adopted guards with knuckle-bars, finger-rings, and/or
sides-rings which lead to the compound-hilt. In later Elizabethan
times, older one-handed medieval type blades became known as "short-swords"
while the larger variety were still referred to as "long-swords".
The term "short sword" was used later by 19th century collectors
to refer to any style of "shorter" one-handed swords typically
from ancient times on.
The Broadsword
A
term popularly misapplied as a generic synonym for medieval swords
or any long, wide military blade. The now popular misnomer "broadsword"
in reference to Medieval blades actually originated with collectors
in the early 19th century -although many mistranslations and
misinterpretations of Medieval literature during the 19th & 20th
centuries have inserted the word broadsword in place of other terms.
They described swords of earlier ages as being "broader"
than their own contemporary thinner ones. Many 17th-19th century blades
such as spadroons, cutlasses, and straight sabers are classed as broadswords
as are other closed hilt military swords. The weapon known as the
true broadsword is in fact a form of short cutlass. The term "broadsword"
does not appear in English military texts from the 1570s - 1630s and
noes not show up in inventories of sword types from the 1630's, and
likely came into use sometime between 1619 and 1630. Descriptions
of swords as "broad" before this time are only incidental
and the word "broad" is used as an adjective in the same
way "sharp" or "large" would be applied. Leading
arms curators almost always list the broadsword specifically as a
close-hilted military sword from the second half of the 17th century.
Those cage and basket hilted blades used by cavalry starting in the
1640's were in form, "broadswords". During this time a gentleman's
blade had become the slender small-sword, whereas the military used
various cutting blades. Today, arms collectors, museum curators theatrical-fighters,
and fantasy-gamers have made the word broadsword a common, albeit
blatantly historically incorrect, term for the Medieval sword.
Long-Swords
The
various kinds of long bladed Medieval swords that had handles long
enough to be used in two hands were deemed long-swords (German Langenschwert/
Langes Swert or Italian spada longa). Long-swords,
war-swords, or great swords are characterized by having
both a long grip and a long blade. We know at the time that
Medieval warriors did distinguished war-swords or great-swords ("grant
espees" or "grete swerdes") from "standard"
swords in general, but long-swords were really just those larger versions
of typical one-handed swords, except with stouter blades. They were
"longer swords", as opposed to single-hand swords, or just
"swords". They could be used on foot or mounted and sometimes
even with a shield. The term war-sword from the 1300's referred to
larger swords that were carried in battle. They were usually kept
on the saddle as opposed to worn on the belt. A 15th century
Burgundian manual refers to both "great and small swords".
As a convenient classification, long-swords include great-swords,
bastard-swords, and estocs. In the 1200s in England blunt swords
for non-lethal tournaments were sometimes known as "arms of courtesy".
There is a reference to an English tournament of 1507 in which among
the events contestants are challenged to "8 strookes with Swords
rebated". Wooden training weapons were sometimes called wasters
in the 1200's or batons in the 1300's and 1400's. Knightly
combat with blunt or "foyled" weapons for pleasure was known
as à plaisance, combat to the death was à lóuutrance.
Great-Swords
Those
blades long and weighty enough to demand a double grip are great-swords.
They are infantry swords which cannot be used in a single-hand. Originally
the term "great-sword" (gret sord, grete
swerde, or grant espée), only meant a war-sword (long-sword),
but it has now more or less come to mean a sub-class of those larger
long-swords/war-swords that are still not true two-handers. They were
even known as Grete Swerdes of Warre or Grans Espees de
Guerre. Although they are "two hand" swords, great-swords
not are the specialized weapons of later two-handed swords. They are
the swords that are antecedents to the even larger Renaissance versions.
Great-swords are also the weapons often depicted in various German
sword manuals. A Medieval great-sword might also be called a "twahandswerds"
or "too honde swerd". Whereas other long-swords could be
used on horseback and some even with shields, great swords however
were infantry weapons only. Their blades might be flat and wide or
later on, more narrow and hexagonal or diamond shaped. These larger
swords capable of facing heavier weapons such as pole-arms and larger
axes were devastating against lighter armors. Long, two-handed swords
with narrower, flat hexagonal blades and thinner tips (such as the
Italian "spadone") were a response to plate-armor. Against
plate armor such rigid, narrow, and sharply pointed swords are not
used in the same chop and cleave manner as with flatter, wider long-swords
and great swords. Instead, they are handled with tighter movements
that emphasize their thrusting points and allow for greater use of
the hilt. Those of the earlier parallel-edged shape are known more
as war-swords, while later the thicker, tapering, sharply pointed
form were more often called bastard-swords. One type of long German
sword, the "Rhenish Langenschwert", from the Rhenish city
of Cologne, had a blade of some 4 feet and an enormous grip of some
14 to 16 inches long, not including the pommel.
Bastard Swords
In
the early 1400's (as early as 1418) a form of long-sword often with
specially shaped grips for one or two hands, became known as an Espée
Bastarde or "bastard sword". The term may derive not
form the blade length, but because bastard-swords typically had longer
handles with special "half-grips" which could be used by
either one or both hands. In this sense they were neither a one-handed
sword nor a true great-sword/two-handed sword, and thus not a member
of either "family" of sword. Evidence shows the their blade
were typically tapered. Since newer types of shorter swords were coming
into use, the term "bastard-sword" came to distinguish this
form of long-sword. Bastard-swords typically had longer handles with
special "half-grips" which could be used by either one or
both hands. These handles have recognizable "waist" and
"bottle" shapes (such grips were later used on the Renaissance
two-handed sword). The unique bastard-sword half-grip was a versatile
and practical innovation. Although, once again classification is not
clear since the term "bastard-sword" appears to have not
been entirely exclusive to those swords with so-called "hand-and-a-half"
handles as older styles of long-sword were still in limited use. Bastard-swords
varied and they might have either a flat blade or narrow hexagonal
one for fighting plate-armor. Some were intended more for cutting
while others were better for thrusting. Bastard swords continued to
be used by knights and men-at-arms into the 1500's. Their hilt style
leads toward the shorter cut & thrust sword forms of the Renaissance.
Strangely, in the early Renaissance the term bastard-sword was also
sometimes used to refer to single-hand arming-swords with compound-hilts.
A form of German arming sword with a bastard-style compound hilt was
called a "Reitschwert" ("cavalry sword") or a
"Degen" ("knight's sword"). Although these might
have been forms of single-hand estoc.
The familiar modern term
"hand-and-a-half" was more or less coined to describe bastards swords
specifically.The term "hand-and-a-half sword" is often used in reference to
long-swords is not historical and is sometimes misapplied to other swords (although during
the late 1500's, long after such blades fell out of favor, some German forms of this
phrase are believed to have been used). While there is no
evidence of the term hand-and-a-half having been used during the Middle Ages,
either in English or other languages, it does appear in the 16th century. In his 1904 bibliography of Spanish texts, D.
Enrique de Leguina gives a 1564 reference to una
espada estoque de mano y media, and a 1594 reference to una espada de mano y media. In the Ragionamento, the unpublished appendix to his 1580,
Traite d Escrime (Fencing Treatise),
Giovanni Antonio Lovino describes one sword as una
spada di una mano et mana et meza (literally hand and a half sword) which
he distinguishes from the much larger spada da due
mani or two-handed sword (the immense Renaissance weapon). The term spadone was used by Fiore Dei Liberi in 1410 to
refer to a tapering long-sword and Camillo Agrippa in 1550 called the spadone a war sword. Later it was defined by John
Florio in his 1598 Italian-English dictionary as a long or two-hand sword.
Two-handed Swords
The
term "two-hander" or "two-handed sword" (espée
a deure mains or spada da due mani) was in use as early
as 1400 and is really a classification of sword applied both to Medieval
great-swords as well Renaissance swords (the true two-handed swords).
Such weapons saw more use in the later Middle Ages and early Renaissance.
Technically, true two-handed swords (epee's a deux main) were actually
Renaissance, not Medieval weapons. They are really those specialized
forms of the later 1500-1600's, such as the Swiss/German Dopplehander
("double-hander") or Bidenhander ("both-hander")
or Zweihander / Zweyhander are relatively modern not
historical terms. English ones were sometimes referred to as "slaughterswords"
after the German Schlachterschwerter ("battle swords").
These weapons were used primarily for fighting against pike-squares
where they would hack paths through lobbing the tips off the poles.
In Germany, England, and elsewhere schools also taught their use for
single-combat. In True two-handed swords have compound-hilts with
side-rings and enlarged cross-guards of up to 12 inches. Most have
small, pointed lugs or flanges protruding from their blades 4-8 inches
below their guard. These parrierhaken or "parrying hooks"
act almost as a secondary guard for the ricasso to prevent other weapons
from sliding down into the hands. They make up for the weapon's slowness
on the defence and can allow another blade to be momentarily trapped
or bound up. They can also be used to strike with. The most well-known
of "twa handit swordis" is the Scottish Claymore
(Gaelic for "claidheamh-more" or great-sword) which developed
out of earlier Scottish great-swords with which they are often compared.
They were used by the Scottish Highlanders against the English in
the 1500's. Another sword of the same name is the later Scots basket-hilt
broadsword (a relative of the Renaissance Slavic-Italian schiavona)
whose hilt completely enclosed the hand in a cage-like guard. Both
swords have come to be known by the same name since the late 1700's.
Certain wave or flame-bladed two-handed swords have come to be known
by collectors as flamberges, although this is inaccurate. Such
swords developed in the early-to-mid 1500's and are more appropriately
known as flammards or flambards (the German Flammenschwert).
The flamberge was also a term later applied to certain types of rapiers.
The wave-blade form is visually striking but really no more effective
in its cutting than a straight one. There were also huge two-handed
blades known as "bearing-swords" or "parade-swords"
(Paratschwert), weighing up to 12 or even 15 pounds and which
were intended only for carrying in ceremonial processions and parades.
In the 1500s there were also a few rare single-edged two-handers
such as the Swiss-German Grosse Messer or later sometimes called
a Zwiehand sabel.
The Estoc
A
form of long, rigid, pointed, triangular or square bladed and virtually
edgeless sword designed for thrusting into plate-armor was the estoc.
Called a stocco in Italian, estoque in Spanish,
a tuck in English, Panzerstecher or Dreiecker
in German, and a kanzer in Eastern Europe. They were used
with two hands and similar to great-swords (but were unrelated to
later rapiers). They were used in two hands with the second hand often
gripping the blade. Some were sharpened only near the point and others
might have one or two large round hand guards. Rapiers are sometimes
mistakenly referred to as tucks, and there is evidence that during
the Renaissance some rapiers may have been referred to as such by
the English. In French "estoc" itself means to thrust.
The
Claymore
Identified with the Scot's symbol of the warrior,
the term "Claymore" is Gaelic for "claidheamh-more" (great sword).
This two-handed broadsword was used by the Scottish Highlanders against the English in the
16th century and is often confused with a Basket-hilt "broadsword" (a relative
of the Italian schiavona) whose hilt completely enclosed the hand in a cage- like
guard. Both swords have come to be known by the same name since the late 1700's.
The Falchion
A
rarer form of sword that was little more than a meat cleaver, possibly
even a simple kitchen and barnyard tool adopted for war. Indeed, it
may come from a French word for a sickle, "fauchon". It
can be seen in Medieval art being used against lighter armors by infidels
as well as footman and even knights. The weapon is entirely European
and not derived from eastern sources. More common in the Renaissance,
it was considered a weapon to be proficient with in addition to the
sword. The falchion is similar to the German Dusack (or Dusagge),
and has been dubiously suggested as possibly related to the Dark Age
long knife, "seax" (scramanseax), and even later
curved blades such as sabres (or sabels). Similar to an Arabian "scimitar",
the falchion's wide, heavy blade weighted more towards the point could
deliver tremendous blows. Several varieties were known, most all with
single edges and rounded points. A later Italian falchion with a slender
sabre-like blade was called a "storta" or a "malchus".
Another similar weapon in German was the saber or machete-like Messer.
Large two-hand versions, called Grosse Messers, with straight
or curved single-edged blades were known by 1500.
Renaissance Swords
Cut & Thrust Swords
The
term "cut and thrust sword" is a general one which can be
applied to a whole range of blade forms (field swords, side swords,
arming swords). However, the Renaissance military sword is generally
characterized by a swept or compound-hilt, a narrow cut-and-thrust
blade with stronger cross-section, and tapering tip. A direct descendant
of the medieval knightly sword, the cut and thrust sword was used
by lightly armed footmen as well as civilians in the 16th and 17th
centuries. During this time they were employed against a range of
armored and unarmored opponents. They were popular for sword &
buckler and sword & dagger fighting. They utilized an innovative
one-handed grip fingering the ricasso (a dull portion of blade just
above the guard). Renaissance cut & thrust swords should not be
referred to as "early Renaissance swords" since they were
actually in use throughout the period. Military and civilian forms
of them existed before, during and after the development of the rapier.
For example, similar blades (with and without ricassos and compound
hilts) saw use in the English Civil War and even later. They should
also not be referred to as "sword-rapiers" or "early
rapiers", although in a sense, some of them were. Renaissance
cut & thrust swords were their own distinct sword type. Although
sometimes considered a "transition" form, this is inaccurate
as they were both the ancestor and contemporary of the rapier for
which they are often misidentified. Some forms of cage & basket
hilts blades are occasionally referred to as "riding swords"
by collectors and curators, and sometimes even as "broadswords".
However, the 16th century Italians did sometimes distinguish between
spada da cavallo, or a blade for horsemen, spada da fante,
an infantry sword for foot-soldiers, and later spada da lato
(side sword), a civilian cut-and-thrust sword, a form of which only
later became the rapier (in modern times sometimes called a stricia).
The Back-Sword
The
back-sword or Backe swerd was a less-common form of single-edged
renaissance military cut & thrust blade with a compound-hilt (side-rings
or anneus, finger-rings, knuckle-bar, etc.). Most popular in England
with a buckler or target from at least the 1520s, it was long
enough for both mounted and infantry and favored because its single-edge
designed allowed for a superior cutting blow. It was also popular
in Germany. Back-swords may be related to later single-edged European
blade forms and came in a variety of hilts and lengths. They also
include later Hangers and hunting swords, as well as Mortuary-hilt
and Walloon-hilt broadswords.
The Schiavona
A
form of agile Renaissance cut & thrust sword with a decorative
cage-hilt and distinctive "cat-head" pommel. So named for
the Schiavoni or Venetian Doges Slavonic mercenaries
and guards of the 1500s who favored the weapon. They are usually
single edged back-swords but may also be wide or narrow double edged
blades. Some have ricasso for a fingering grip while others have thumb-rings.
The Schiavona is often considered the antecedent to other cage hilt
swords such as the Scottish basket-hilted "broadsword".
The Katzbalger
A
form of one-handed sword with a shorter blade and "S" shaped
guard. It was favored by pikemen and the Swiss/German Landesknetchs
for fighting close in amidst pike-squares. Many were originally longer,
wider blades which were cut down and remounted. The name likely derives
from a word associated with cat- gut or cat-skin. THeir lengths varied
from short to mid-sized.
The Rapier
Popular
in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, the rapier was a dueling
weapon whose form was developed from cut and thrust swords. Its use
was more brutal and forceful than the light sport fencing that we
know of today. Originally, starting about 1470, any civilian sword
was often referred to as simply a "rapier", but it quickly
took on the meaning of a slender, civilian thrusting sword. There
is also an English document from the 1500's that uses the term "rapier-sword"
for advising courtiers how to be armed, indicating the understanding
that there were new slender blades coming into civilian use. Eventually
developing into an edgeless, ideal thrusting weapon, the quick, innovative
rapier superseded the military cut & thrust sword for personal
duel and urban self-defense. Being capable of making only limited
lacerations, earlier varieties of rapier are still often confused
with the cut and thrust swords which gave gestation to their method.
As a civilian weapon of urban self-defense, a true rapier was a tip-based
thrusting sword that used stabbing and piercing, not slashing and
cleaving. True rapier blades ranged from early flatter triangular
blades to thicker, narrow hexagonal ones. Rapier hilts range from
swept styles, to later dishes and cups. It had no true cutting edge
such as with military swords for war.
The "Sword Rapier"
The
so-called "sword-rapier" is actually a term invented by
collectors in the last century and is not a historical one. Increasingly,
many Renaissance cut & thrust swords are mistakenly labeled as
such. With the ascendancy of rapiers over swords in personal duel
and private quarrel, there were many attempts to combine the slashing
and cleaving potential of a traditional military sword with the quick,
agile thrust of a dueling rapier. This lead to a great deal of experimental
blade forms, many of which were dismal failures with neither the cutting
power of wider swords, nor the speed and lightness of true rapiers.
Made to do both, they typically did neither very well and few examples
of these blades forms survive. They do appear to have been popular
with high-ranking military officers during the mid 17th century (who
of course, would be among those least likely to engage in battlefield
hand-to- hand combat). They are also sometimes mistakenly called "cutting
rapiers" or assumed to be some form of "transition"
blade between swords and rapiers.
The Flamberge
An
unusual waved-bladed rapier popular with officers and upper classes
during the 1600s. It was considered to look both fashionable and deadly
as well as erroneously believed to inflict a more deadly wound. When
parrying with the flamberge, the opponent's sword was slowed slightly
as it passed along the length. It also created a disconcerting vibration
in the other blade. The term flamberge was also used later to describe
a dish-hilted rapier with a normal straight blade. Certain wave or
flame-bladed two-handed swords have also come to be known by collectors
as "flamberges", although this is inaccurate. Such swords
are more appropriately known as "flammards" or "flambards".
The
Small Sword
Sometimes known as a "court-sword", a
"walking-sword", or "town-sword", small-swords developed in the late
Renaissance as a personal dueling tool and weapon of self-defense. Most popular in the
1700's it is sometimes confused with the rapier. It consisted almost exclusively of a
sharp pointed metal rod with a much smaller guard and finger-rings. Its blade was
typically a hollow triangular shape and was much thicker at the hilt. Most had no edge at
all, and were merely rigid, pointed, metal rods. They were popular with the upper classes
especially as decorative fashion accessories, worn like jewelry. In a skilled hand the
small sword was an effective and deadly instrument. Until the early 1800s it continued to
be used even against older rapiers and even some cutting swords. It is the small-sword
rather than the rapier which leads to the epee and foil of modern sport fencing.
Curved Blades
While it is the straight-bladed cruciform sword
style that for both war and duel was perfected in Europe as no where else, curved
swords were hardly unknown. Many forms were known from the ancient convex-bladed Greek kopis
and Iberian falcatta, to the laengsaex curved Viking blade, as well as
the short-sword/long-knife seax or scramsax. There is also the Medieval
falchion and the German curved Messer, Grossmessr, and bohemian Dusask
The Italians used the curved storta, the straight bladed but curved-edge braquemart
and the curved badelair (baudelair, bazelair, or basilaire) as well
as the short curved braquet. Finally, wide varieties of sabers, sabres, sabels,
and cutlasses were used from at least the mid-1500s. Indigenous European
curved sword forms such as the Czech tesak, Polish tasak, and Russian tisak
were used since at least the 7th century.
Daggers
A
common long dagger, "poignard" (poniard), or "pugnale"
was a favored companion, carried en-suite with a sword or rapier
as a backup weapon or even on its own. The dagger was lightweight,
deadly, and elegant. Used primarily as a defensive weapon, dagger
fighting was an art itself. Technically, a poniard was square or triangular
shaped with no edge, while a dagger had a knife-like blade. Generally,
daggers in the Middle Ages were employed point down, pommel up, while
those in the Renaissance were used point up with the thumb placed
on the hilt. Many later daggers for use with rapiers had elaborate
guards and were specially designed for trapping and parrying.
Bucklers
The buckler (or Italian "rondash" or
"bochiero") was a small, agile hand-shield. Used since medieval times, bucklers
were round or even square, approx. 8-20" and made of metal, wood, or metal trimmed
wood. A single handle (or enarme) was used to hold it in a fist grip and smack, deflect or
punch at blows and thrusts. The edge could also be used to strike and block. Some had long
metal spikes on the front to attack with. On some later bucklers metal hooks or bars were
placed on the front to trap the point of an opponent's rapier. More popular for a method
of 16th sword & buckler fighting, they declined in use during the early 17th century
as they were inconvenient for urban wear and faster rapiers outmaneuvered them.
The Targe
A targe/targa (or Italian "rondella") was
a small wooden shield with a leather cover and leather or metal trim. Some were also
covered with metal studs or spikes. Unlike bucklers, targes were worn on the arm as with
typical shields. They were also usually flat rather than convex. Though associated with
the Scots, the word "targe" actually comes from small "targets" placed
on archery practice dummies. Some forms of medium sized steel shields from the Renaissance
are often classed as targes. In England in the 1500s & 1600s, "target" was a
common term for any small shield.
Sword Parts
Hilt - The upper portion of a
sword consisting of the cross-guard, handle/grip, and pommel (most
Medieval swords have a straight cross or cruciform-hilt). Called
the Handhabe in German. In Old French the crosspiece was called
helz, the grip called poing, the pommel called pom, and the handle
might be bound with metal rings called mangon.
Cross - The typically straight bar
or "guard" of a Medieval sword, also called a "cross-guard".
A Renaissance term for the straight or curved cross-guard was the
quillons (possibly from an old French or Latin term for a type of
reed). Fiore Dei Liberi in 1410 referred to it as the crucibus.
Fillipo Vadi in the 1480s termed it the cross-guard or "crosses",
Elza term. Called the Gehiltz or Gehultz in German.
Called the Kreuz in German and Croce in Italian.
Quillions: A Renaissance term for the two
cross-guards (forward and back) whether straight or curved. It is likely from an old
French or Latin term for a reed. On Medieval swords the cross guard may be called simply
the "cross", or just the "guard".
Pommel: Latin for "little apple", the
counter-weight which secures the hilt to the blade and allows the hand either rest on it
or grip it.
Forte': A Renaissance term for
the upper portion on a sword blade which has more control and strength
and which does most of the parrying. Also called prime or fort.
Foible: A Renaissance term for
the lower portion on a sword blade which is weaker (or "feeble")
but has more agility and speed and which does most of the attacking.
Fuller - A shallow central-groove or channel on a
blade which lightens it as well as improves strength and flex. Sometimes mistakenly called
a "blood-run" or "blood-groove", it has nothing to do with blood flow,
cutting power, or a blade sticking. A sword might have one, none, or several fullers
running a portion of its length, on either one or both sides. Narrow deep fullers are also
sometimes referred to as flukes. The opposite of a fuller is a riser, which improves
rigidity.
Grip - The handle of a sword, usually made of
leather, wire, bone, horn, or ivory (also, a term for the method of holding the sword).
Lower end - the tip portion of a Medieval sword
Pommel - Latin for "little apple", the
counter-weight which secures the hilt to the blade and allows the hand to either rest on
it or grip it. Sometimes it includes a small rivet (capstan rivet) called a pommel nut,
pommel bolt, or tang nut. On some Medieval swords the pommel may be partially or fully
gripped and handled.
Ricasso - The dull portion of a blade just above
the hilt. It is intended for wrapping the index finger around to give greater tip control
(called "fingering"). Not all sword forms had ricasso. They can be found on many
Bastard-swords, most cut & thrust swords and later rapiers. Those on Two-Handed swords
are sometimes called a "false-grip", and usually allow the entire second had to
grip and hold on. The origin of the term is obscure.
Shoulder - The corner portion of a sword separating
the blade from the tang.
Tang - The un-edged hidden portion or
("tongue") of a blade running through the handle and to which the pommel is
attached. The place where the tang connects to the blade is called the
"shoulder". A sword's tang is sometimes of a different temper than the blade
itself. The origin of the term is obscure.
Upper end - The hilt portion of a Medieval sword
Waisted-grip - A specially shaped handle on some
bastard or hand-and-a-half swords, consisting of a slightly wider middle and tapering
towards the pommel.
Annellet/Finger-Ring: The small loops extending
toward the blade from the quillions intended to protect a finger wrapped over the guard.
They developed in the middle-ages and can be found on many styles of Late-Medieval swords.
They are common on Renaissance cut & thrust swords and rapiers they and also
small-swords. For some time they have been incorrectly called the "pas d`ane".
Compound-Hilt/Complex-Guard: A term used for the
various forms of hilt found on Renaissance and some late-Medieval swords. They consist
typically of finger-rings, side-rings or ports, a knuckle-bar, and counter-guard or
back-guard. Swept-hilts, ring-hilts, cage-hilts, and some basket-hilts are forms of
complex-guard.
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