New to the forums questions/house rules etc

Yes, the greeks wore their plate without mail, and the romans used either plate or mail. The greeks and romans made their plates of bronze, this because with the current metallurgical skills bronze made better plates than steel.

This might be a language barrier - but when referring to medieval accoutrements of war, 'plate armour' as a general term refers to armour composed of large, shaped pieces of iron. By that definition, neither the ancient Greeks nor the Romans wore plate armour. By a looser, non-specific definition, they did. But that's not what this discussion is about.

The Romans wore a composite armour -- bands of iron plates (segmented armour), or very small plates (scale). The Greeks wore single plates of bronze.

But when referring to the MEDIEVAL period, plate armour was a later development, as bronze armour was not used, and the metallurgical knowledge required to make such items with iron was nonexistant. Scale armour is scale armour, it is not considered 'plate armour.' If it were considered such, 'plate armour' would qualify as the oldest non-material armour in existance.

There's a reason that historical treatises do not refer to Roman, Egyptian, Greek, Assyrian (ad nauseum) armour as plate.


(Or iron, if you prefer to call the steel of the ancients for iron, as some do. I obviously don't.)

I'm not sure what you're talking about here. Romans used iron in their armour, and sometimes bronze. Greeks used bronze, as the shaping of metal armour from iron was not a possibility in their time (they used iron in their weapons, however).

Steel is a different substance than iron. Iron is iron, steel is iron and a particular mixture of other materials (largely carbon).


One had to have strong enough barrels to get high enough velocity to punch through plate armour of a weight a man could wear. If you look at cannon, they were using bronze for a long time because the forces generated in a cannon sooner or later blew a cannon made of iron apart.

I'm not sure what this has to do with anything. I made no mention of the REASONS why firearms could not reliably penetrate plate armour in the medieval era, I only said that they couldn't.

But truly, velocity has nothing to do with 'strong barrels.' Firearm barrels in the medieval period (for hand-held weapons) were made of iron. It was other advances in barrel technology (such as rifling) and advances in gunpowder that increased the power of firearms, not the material of the barrel.

Likewise, cannon were made of bronze (and even stone) because the technology required to create iron cannon was not available. It wasn't that an iron cannon would be 'torn apart' - it's that they couldn't even MAKE iron cannon.

However, if you look at the link about plate armour I provided, you will see that it was in use in both world wars, as it was still able to stop fire from sidearms and smgs. Body armour will probably get a revival, actually it already is.

Plate armour by its medieval definition will never make a comeback. What we have -now- is ceramic plates (small plates which are not what we would call relevant to medieval plate armour) and other substances capable of resisting gunfire. Those substances are a lot better at it than plate armour could ever be for such protection.

As for the link you provided - it was Wikipedia. Wikipedia is a complete crap resource. It's good, as with any encyclopedia, for getting the broad strokes on a subject, as well as occasionally names and dates (even these can be suspect at times). For in-depth discourse, you'll need to find a better source of information than Wikipedia. I prefer books, myself. As many books as can be found on any given subject. Cross-referencing is a must.

No offense to you, of course. I'm not denigrating your knowledge - only the source you are choosing to provide.

Strange. Have you tried? With a sharp greatsword cutting a 2" pine pole isn't a big deal, however, I must admit I haven't tried poles made of any other material.

I have tried. And I've watched other tests personally, and read up on quite a few more. It's simply not plausible. Swords are not designed to hack through dense material like armour or wood. If swords could hack through wood, shields would never have been used. And the haft of a pike is actually thicker than the face of a shield.

I have to stress that - swords were not designed for that. Each weapon has its capabilities. If you want to cut wood, you get an axe, not a sword. The cross-section and distal taper of most swords, including two-handers, are simply not suited to that kind of usage.

How much would the weight of a pike increase if it were protected by langets?

Negligible. Less than two pounds.

Obviously much more than the weight of a shorter pole arm.

Not at all. Langets are langets. They're not going to suddenly become significantly heavier because they're on a different weapon.

And, if the shorter pole arms were protected by langets because they could be hacked apart as you seem to imply, why would the swaying of the longer pole arms protect them better than the higher agility with which a man could purposefully move his shorter polearm?

Because the -longer- a weapon is, the less control you have over it. A four-foot stick, if struck, will sway far less in your hand than a 12-foot stick. A man holding a shorter polearm would distinctly NOT 'choose' for his weapon to sway. He wants to maintain control of it. Langets are a better choice -- they can take the attack without damage and allow the wielder to maintain full control of his weapon and keep it readied, rather than the suicidal manuever of allowing it to 'sway' with the blow.

Further, a smaller polearm in personal combat could be targetted by MULTIPLE cuts. Remember, I did not say that one cut is going to lop the head off a bardiche. I did say that many cuts will eventually break it. A pike is not going to be suffering many cuts thanks to its reach. A shorter weapon may, however. Therefore, in order for the pike to require langets, it would have had to have been possible to hack it apart in one stroke. Pikes did not have langets. Pikes could not be cut in half in one stroke.

Like I said, pikes were not cut, they were shoved aside. That is called 'breaking the pike' or 'breaking the pike formation.' The Italian sword-and-buckler soldiers I mentioned called it by the same name, yet no one seems ready to assume that a single-hand sword can cut a pike in half.


Good idea. But I doubt if they should do 2d10 damage used in such a manner. What about 1d12 - like the war sword? Actually, in Conan, the war sword can be used 2h as a finesse weapon, and this without a feat.


Thanks. I still use 2d10 just to make it easier. I've never much liked rules where weapon damage is split between types and such, for one weapon. Players already have enough to remember just between AE, all the sourcebooks we own, and a few houserules. No need to add extra complications. Besides, I think it would be extremely weak to require a feat just to allow a player to use a weapon for significantly less damage. Especially since it's mostly a flavour issue - greatswords handle even heavy armour very well in the game without finesse.

And like you said, the war sword already does the finesse thing at 1d12. The greatsword should be a slightly meaner version of that. Your mileage may vary, of course.
 
Thanks. I still use 2d10 just to make it easier. I've never much liked rules where weapon damage is split between types and such, for one weapon. Players already have enough to remember just between AE, all the sourcebooks we own, and a few houserules. No need to add extra complications. Besides, I think it would be extremely weak to require a feat just to allow a player to use a weapon for significantly less damage. Especially since it's mostly a flavour issue - greatswords handle even heavy armour very well in the game without finesse.

And like you said, the war sword already does the finesse thing at 1d12. The greatsword should be a slightly meaner version of that. Your mileage may vary, of course.

In my opinion the extra damage caused by the greatsword is down to the way it is swung coupled with its greater weight behnd it when swinging. If you wished to use it as finesse (thrusting etc) I cant see it being any more effective than a warsword. Of course it would still benefit from the extra strength bonus damage for being two handed.
 
In my opinion the extra damage caused by the greatsword is down to the way it is swung coupled with its greater weight behnd it when swinging. If you wished to use it as finesse (thrusting etc) I cant see it being any more effective than a warsword. Of course it would still benefit from the extra strength bonus damage for being two handed.

You could certainly argue it in either direction.

Here's how I see it, just in case you're interested (or anyone else is):

Weapon Damage in gaming is not what you would call intuitive. There's no real rhyme or reason to it except for the two generic rules of 'what looks right is right' and 'bigger hits harder.' The case you make above is perfectly sensible. The problem is that it falls apart when you remember that in the same game -- a longer spear does more damage than a shorter one, despite the fact that they would actually hit with equal force (a spear would not benefit from greater weight or size because it is not being swung - it is being thrust, and by the greatsword/war sword logic here, we should present both spears as equal-damage weapons).

If we look deeper, weapon damage doesn't even make much logical sense. Consider a greatsword and an arming sword. What's the worst thing either weapon can do to you? Kill you, of course. But what's the worst they can do without killing you (read: maximum non-critical damage)? Well, the same exact thing -- sever a limb or open a very severe, but non-deadly cut. Neither weapon is actually -more- deadly than the other. Each one is equally capable of hacking you open. An arming sword might only scratch you, but equally, a greatsword might only scratch you.

A dagger thrust is just as likely to kill you as a war sword thrust. Yet, the dagger does significantly less damage, even though when inches of steel are shoved through your body, the exact number of inches is largely academic.

Different weapons were not developed in real life because one was intrinsically more deadly. There were two defining reasons to use different weapons (generally speaking, and ignoring smaller considerations): reach and armour penetration. A longer sword has more reach than a shorter sword. It isn't more likely to kill, it's just longer. A pollax has more power than a hand-axe, and so is more capable of inflicting blunt-force trauma through plate. But a heavy cut to the arm with either is going to be debilitating.

So when imagining what damage makes 'sense' -- I dispense with trying to make it logical, because logic dictates that most weapons have the same basic damage range, with wildly different crit modifiers and armour penetration values. Rather, I follow the same basic rule that the game designers followed - bigger does more damage, smaller does less damage, and certain 'types' of weapons are equally deadly (similar crit modifiers for similar weapons), and equally capable of armour penetration (similar AP values for similar styles of weapon).

If we made it logical, and insisted that, as you say, a greatsword thrust is not intrinsically more damaging than a war sword thrust, well . . . entire groupings of weapons in the game become largely the same, as explained above. Greatswords, war swords, arming swords, battle-axes -- they'd all have the exact same stats. We'd have to fall onto two things, first making AP values more varied. Secondly, and far more confusing, we'd have to change weapon reach increments to 1 foot, in order to show weapons as they really are -- a greatsword isn't more deadly on the cut than an arming sword, but it's between one and two feet longer, granting a strong advantage in combat.

Woof, I'm long-winded, aren't I? Apologies. Just to reiterate, I'm not trying to denigrate your opinion. I agree with you, to a certain extent. Like I said, your logic is perfectly reasonably and correct. It's just not how the game system works (in -my- opinion only).
 
> The Romans wore a composite armour -- bands of iron plates
> (segmented armour), or very small plates (scale).

Off course, excepting the Lorica Musculata. I thought they were made of bronze, however, some people insist that the romans made them from leather. The reproductions made of steel are obviously not true to the original material.. Some pictures here to provide an idea to what I am talking about:
http://www.larp.com/legioxx/orgoff.html
http://www.by-the-sword.com/acatalog/images/ah-6071-r.jpg
http://www.a2armory.com/rommuscuir1.html
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=300077474466&ssPageName=MERCOSI_VI_ROSI_PR4_PCN_BIX_Stores&refitem=140098773176&itemcount=4&refwidgetloc=closed_view_item&refwidgettype=osi_widget#ebayphotohosting

Obviously, if the romans made them of leather instead of bronze like the etruscans and greeks, then you are correct that they didn't use plate armour.



> There's a reason that historical treatises do not refer to Roman,
> Egyptian, Greek, Assyrian (ad nauseum) armour as plate.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Lorica-Segmentata-Handbook-Armour-Monograph/dp/0953984842
- However, M.C. Bishop (Mike Bishop) is an archeologist, not a historian
http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/awards/award_detail.asp?id=321598 "The metallurgy of Roman plate armour"
- Obviously not a historian?

Short and sweet, not everybody is a historian, and not everybody embraces the spesific meanings historians put on words. I, for one, am not an historian by trade and do not pretend to be one either.



> Steel is a different substance than iron. Iron is iron, steel is iron and a
> particular mixture of other materials (largely carbon).

Not entirely true. You see, what is commonly known as "iron" these days is more correctly "wrought iron", iron with less than 1% carbon. Steel is, as you correctly describe it, iron with more carbon, 2-3%, and usually some other ingredients. However, the ancients wasn't entirely stupid and quickly discovered that mixing wrought iron, which was good for plows, with brittle iron (which had high carbon content) they could make an iron which was superior in strength to bronze, but very costly to produce compared to normal iron. Still cheaper than bronze though. However, it couldn't be cast so due to the production method, so it was not fit for making plate armour from. This iron is much more similar to modern steel than it is to wrought iron. The steel the late medieval armorsmiths used to make medieval plate armour was indeed superior to ancient weaponsgrade iron (or steel), and off course inferior to modern steel. Steel wasn't invented in 1300 AD, it was made more than 1500 years earlier.



> I made no mention of the REASONS why firearms could not reliably
> penetrate plate armour in the medieval era, I only said that they
> couldn't.

Which is why I come with additional information. I am not contradicting you. If you for some reason feel your position as these foras fountainhead of historical knowledge is challenged in some way by additional, supporting information I am afraid I cannot help you.



> It was other advances in barrel technology (such as rifling) and
> advances in gunpowder that increased the power of firearms, not the
> material of the barrel.

Rifling helps accuracy. without a strong enough material to make the barrels of the rifling isn't feasible, it is worn out too fast. The burning rate of powder limits the upper theoretical speed of bullets, however, the bursting limit of the barrel is of much higher concern. A long time they could have increased the power of the rounds by using more powder, but if they did, the guns would inevitably burst. And, as every blackpowder enthusiast knows, if you load a blackpowder weapon with modern powder you will blow up your gun. Why? Because modern guns have stronger barrels, because their barrels are made of stronger materials. If you have ever held a musket you will notice that is not lighter than a modern weapon, so it is not matter of too thin barrel. Contrary to popular opinion rifling does not, in itself, make a round go further or faster. Better material for the barrel > stronger loads > faster bullets > better penetration.

Off course, rifling makes it possible to make sure one end of the bullet hits the target first so you can make bullets which penetrates armour even better. However, with too low calibers the bullets tend to pitch over anyway, but that is another story.



> It wasn't that an iron cannon would be 'torn apart' - it's that they
> couldn't even MAKE iron cannon.

Oh yes, they could and tried, but they never held together for long.



> I prefer books, myself. As many books as can be found on any given
> subject. Cross-referencing is a must.
> No offense to you, of course. I'm not denigrating your knowledge - only
> the source you are choosing to provide.

A lot of books are crap too. Books are not instantly available and definitely not updatable except by printing a new edition. Wikipedia is all these things and, as you say, good at giving a broad view of the field.



> If swords could hack through wood, [wooden] shields would never have
> been used. And the haft of a pike is actually thicker than the face of a
> shield.

1: You don't hack through a shield from the front to the back with a sword. That is impossible due to the construction of the sword. However, you might damage the shield from one of the edges.
2: Shields are supposed to be reinforced with a steel band around the edges. If you don't, or use a softer iron edge on a round shield, then you have a shield of the type vikings used in which swords would often be lodged in so the owner of the shield could twist the weapon and disarm his opponent.
3: Shields were often replaced after combat due to damage.
4: If your statement that swords can't hack through wood was true there should have been a market for wooden armour for use when fighting people armed with swords. I have never heard anyone wanting to use armour made of wood. But that might just be me. So much for theory.
5: Using this replica,
http://shop.fencing.net/Practical_Hand_and_a_Half_Sword_p/ca-2106.htm
me and my cousing split wooden logs, length 30cm, diameter 8-14 cm. And, you know, those training replicas are supposed to be inferior to the real thing and they are definitely not sharp.



> Not at all. Langets are langets. They're not going to suddenly become
> significantly heavier because they're on a different weapon.

I assume langets are used to protect the pole-part of a polearm. Obviously, to protect a longer polearm, like a pike, the langets must cover a bigger area. And hence weigh more. That is simple physics.



> A pike is not going to be suffering many cuts thanks to its reach.

Uh, ok. Longer weapon, less cuts. I don't get the reasoning why here.



> Pikes could not be cut in half in one stroke.

Well, sir, I can do this, so you must be misinformed. Or perhaps I am some kind of freak of nature, gifted with unnatural speed and strength.
 
Oake said:
Of course it would still benefit from the extra strength bonus damage for being two handed.

Unless you are using a warsword from horseback it can only finesse when used twohanded, and then it would too do more damage due to being used twohanded.
 
Damien said:
You could certainly argue it in either direction.

Here's how I see it, just in case you're interested (or anyone else is):

Very good! What works best should really be the deciding factor, and people would fear the greatsword more if it did more damage. And, it requires a feat to do this while the warsword doesn't, so it isn't like totally imba.
 
I assume langets are used to protect the pole-part of a polearm. Obviously, to protect a longer polearm, like a pike, the langets must cover a bigger area. And hence weigh more. That is simple physics.

Whether the langets were longer or not it would still make the pike seem heavier. Rember that pikes were typically 15-20 feet long - imagine the effect any extra weight at the business end of a pike would have when holding it at full length. It would certainly make it a little harder for the wielder. I really have no idea whether pikes were typically fitted with langets or not tbh, its something I'll have to look into now youve got me interested.


As interesting as I find this sort of discussion its all pretty moot from a gaming point of view. Remember that Hyboria is a fantasy setting and who is to say what sort of metals and metallurgy skills its people possessed. Their version of steel may be very different to the type we know. I'm just happy to take my weapon and armour stats straight from the book
:wink:
 
Wow, I totally forgot what this thread was originally about after the history buffs came in and started beating each other up.

In any case, I've received a number of the Conan books now, and I am looking forward to starting my campaign soon. One of my players has taken the opportunity of my preparations for the Conan game to run his own campaign in the interim so I just have to wait for him to finish up now.

My campaign so far is going to have 5 players, so far with a Scholar, Noble, Pirate, and a Thief. I'm not sure what the 5th player is going to start as yet. The initial story is going to involve a noble's revenge on a competitor, a mysterious Stygian sorcerer and his young slave, a secret city lost in an ancient jungle, and a relic from the Outer Dark. I'm looking forward to it.
 
Off course, excepting the Lorica Musculata. I thought they were made of bronze, however, some people insist that the romans made them from leather. The reproductions made of steel are obviously not true to the original material.. Some pictures here to provide an idea to what I am talking about:

The Bronze/Leather debate has been raging for years. I doubt we'll see an end to it anytime soon. Of course, this is all irrelevant. Reread what I said -- when speaking about medieval history and things related to it, it's snarky to come in and point out that 'plate armour existed in so and so a time' because people speaking of plate armour in this context are specifically referring to the development of the late 13th century onward.

In order for what you're saying here to be in any way relevant, you must be able to draw a clear line from the 'plate armour' used by Greeks and Romans to 'plate armour' used by 13th century Western Europeans. But you cannot, because they are different and there is no direct link between them. That's what I'm saying here.

The Romans used armour made of metal plates (in varying sizes and styles). They did not use plate armour as the term is intended when talking about the medieval era.


Obviously not a historian?

One could go either way on that, since what he's saying is 'armour made from plates' and not the medieval concept of 'plate armour.' Different things, you know.
Further, it's one historian. I can also find you the name of a historian that regularly uses the terms 'broadsword' and 'chainmail.' Anyone in the field, however, will tell you right off that these are not appropriate terms. It happens, from time to time.

I, for one, am not an historian by trade and do not pretend to be one either.

How does one 'pretend' to be a historian by trade? Wouldn't that require outright lying, as you would have to actually make the explicit claim that you are a degree-holding historian. There's a difference between being a historian, and being one by trade. Actually, nothing in the definition of 'historian' requires it to be a trade. Any writer of history or expert on history is considered a historian. Of course, one could debate how one becomes an 'expert.'


Not entirely true. You see, what is commonly known as "iron" these days is more correctly "wrought iron", iron with less than 1% carbon. Steel is, as you correctly describe it, iron with more carbon, 2-3%, and usually some other ingredients

Actually, steel has been .2 and 1.8 percent carbon. Wrought Iron is less than .2 percent carbon (generally less than .15 percent). When speaking of medieval and ancient 'iron' -- yes, people are referring to wrought iron. As we agree - it's an entirely different substance from steel.


However, the ancients wasn't entirely stupid and quickly discovered that mixing wrought iron, which was good for plows, with brittle iron (which had high carbon content) they could make an iron which was superior in strength to bronze, but very costly to produce compared to normal iron.

Mixing wrought iron with more iron of a high carbon content creates a form of mild steel (or pig iron - which is a useless substance for armour and weapons, so I'm assuming you're not talking about that).

Not discovering something does not make people stupid. And most ancients did not 'quickly discover' this. Wrought iron is still what's being found throughout most of the ancient world's military relics. Every Greek kopis and xiphos, for instance, is iron (wrought) - not mild steel. The 'quick discovery' you are talking about happened in very specific parts of the world, generally at entirely different timeframes and was not widely known at all in the ancient world. Only the Chinese and possibly the Indians are thought to have understood what you're talking about, in the Ancient world. And even then - Indian and Chinese ancient military artifacts are almost exclusively iron rather than mild steel.

The development you refer to is a Great Migrations/Late Rome (essentially, bordering on early medieval) era development, not a truly Ancient one.

Also, most historians I am aware of make a point of saying that ancient peoples used iron early on because it was FAR cheaper and easier to get, and make a further point of saying that iron at the time was NOT stronger than bronze. Bronze is extremely expensive to produce given that it requires both tin and copper. Meaning, you have to mine for two ores that are almost never found together in one place - neither ore being nearly as common as iron ore, to point a fact. Trade, huge money expenditures -- bronze was an expensive way to go, and while iron wasn't as good (at the time), it was immensely cheaper and easier.

Warfare loves cheap and easy - just look at early firearms.

But I'll reiterate, at no time in the Ancient world was the iron produced in a way that made it structurally superior to bronze, and the art of making mild steel would not be widely known for thousands of years after the beginning of the Iron Age. The first mild steel weapons I am aware of come from the 5th (?) century Spanish/Portugese - back when it was called the Iberian Peninsula.

Then we have crucible steel and various other forms of steel showing up sometime after the 7th century.


Steel wasn't invented in 1300 AD, it was made more than 1500 years earlier.

I didn't say steel was invented in 1300 C.E. I said that plate armour as it pertains to the medieval period began its development only a short two or three decades prior to 1300 C.E.


Which is why I come with additional information. I am not contradicting you. If you for some reason feel your position as these foras fountainhead of historical knowledge is challenged in some way by additional, supporting information I am afraid I cannot help you.

Clearly I misunderstood your intent in that particular comment. But don't be snarky, there's no need for it. Taking little jabs like that is only going to lead to a little pissing match - is that what you want to instigate?


Rifling helps accuracy.

It also aids velocity.

Contrary to popular opinion rifling does not, in itself, make a round go further or faster. Better material for the barrel > stronger loads > faster bullets > better penetration.

Rifling, so far as I am aware (feel free to provide a source and quote to contradict this, I'm willing to learn) does aid in increasing velocity. However, we're moving away from the point. You claimed that stronger barrels increased velocity. I was simply pointing out that barrel material is NOT going to change velocity. It may allow you to use other things that will, but itself, it does nothing for velocity. That's what I was contesting. I can quote you, if you like:

One had to have strong enough barrels to get high enough velocity

You make a direct parallel between barrel strength and velocity -- completely missing the other stuff that -actually- affects velocity. That's what I was pointing out.


Oh yes, they could and tried, but they never held together for long.

Oh no, they couldn't, and didn't.

Historian Nicholas Michael discusses this exact thing in Armies of Medieval Burgundy, and specifically states that at the advent of cannon, the making of iron cannon was simply not possible. He discusses the gun-manufacturers of Jacques and Roland of Majorca (may have spelled that wrong) and how just prior to 1370 they were contracted to cast (bronze) a dozen large-calibre cannon. He further notes that for increased strength they were supported by several iron rungs. He even refers to the cannon bursting after being fired on some occasions -- bronze cannon, that is.

He further mentions the specifics of cannon-building, that they were cast of bronze or forged hoop and stave. Perhaps this latter type is what you are talking about - but it should be noted that these were not solid iron cannon - they were composite items. The most important thing to note about the historical texts is how they refer to cannon as being cast. Iron could not be cast at this early period, because the technology just wasn't there. It wouldn't be until roughly the first few decades of the 16th century that casters could reliably work with iron.



A lot of books are crap too. Books are not instantly available and definitely not updatable except by printing a new edition. Wikipedia is all these things and, as you say, good at giving a broad view of the field.

I'd rather have a book that's a year out of date than a website which can be edited by -anyone- that chooses to write in it, especially when their errors aren't likely to be noticed unless someone either knows the subject better (AND sees fit to change the entry). In effect, reading Wikipedia is even less useful than reading, say, this very thread. Typing it doesn't make it true, right? Otherwise, you couldn't contest anything I've said. ;)

That said, books are a better source not because they are infallible. They're a better source because they're backed by a person's name whom you can research to find out how they are generally percieved in their field. A book is more 'solid' so to speak, if you get what I'm saying. And no, it isn't immediately available over the Internet, but you can always name the book and page - and provide quotes, or just name the book and provide an overview of what's included. After all, if I'm not willing to believe you when you say a book says a certain thing, you can always go edit an entry on Wikipedia to say the same thing, right? ;)


1: You don't hack through a shield from the front to the back with a sword.

I didn't say you should. I was stating the difference in thickness between the haft of the pike and the thickness of the shield, which is relevant to how much material is present when you strike the edge of the shield, of course.


2: Shields are supposed to be reinforced with a steel band around the edges. If you don't, or use a softer iron edge on a round shield, then you have a shield of the type vikings used in which swords would often be lodged in so the owner of the shield could twist the weapon and disarm his opponent.

Firstly, shields are not supposed to be reinforced with anything. We have no idea how many shields were treated in such a way, since virtually no medieval shields survived to the present day. Comparatively few items have been found that could even be iron/steel rims. So the likelihood here is that they actually were not very common at all.

Likewise, most of the rims we DO have are from Viking shields. So you've got it a bit backwards. You've also got it wrong with how it works. No sword is going to sink deep enough into the edge of a shield to get stuck enough to be disarmed from its wielder. According to the texts, shields without rims could be used to 'catch' the blade by allowing it to dig into the edge of the shield. It would not be stuck, but the jarring 'catch' of it for that brief moment would allow you to counterattack (not wrench the sword away from your opponent).


4: If your statement that swords can't hack through wood was true there should have been a market for wooden armour for use when fighting people armed with swords. I have never heard anyone wanting to use armour made of wood. But that might just be me. So much for theory.

Someone without any common sense might assume that, yes.

However, a person with the ability to use logic and reason would readily recognize that just because something cannot be easily cut by a sword does not mean it would make for good armour. By that logic, of course, medieval knights should have dressed themselves in worked limestone and granite.


5: Using this replica,
http://shop.fencing.net/Practical_Hand_and_a_Half_Sword_p/ca-2106.htm
me and my cousing split wooden logs, length 30cm, diameter 8-14 cm. And, you know, those training replicas are supposed to be inferior to the real thing and they are definitely not sharp.

Without knowing the specifics, I have no choice but to call that absolute bull. Every test I have ever performed or witnessed (largely by ARMA) bears out that this is simply not plausible. I'll take a dozen tests witnessed with my own eyes and attested to by established men in the field over your word. No offense, of course.

I assume langets are used to protect the pole-part of a polearm. Obviously, to protect a longer polearm, like a pike, the langets must cover a bigger area. And hence weigh more. That is simple physics.

Yeah, that is simple physics. The problem is that you can't use physics to make an argument when those physics are not applicable. Nothing requires the langets of a pike to be longer than the langets of any other polearm. The only need to be long enough to dissuade opponents from lopping off the end of the weapon, or trying to otherwise damage it. Thus, you only need to protect a certain portion. Most langets were about a foot long or a little less. That would be more than sufficient for a pike.


Uh, ok. Longer weapon, less cuts. I don't get the reasoning why here.

It's quite simple really. A shorter weapon is a weapon being actively used. A man with a pollaxe is actively fighting a man with a longsword. His weapon is consistently exposed to the other man's sword.

A pike, on the other hand, is all or nothing. The enemy will take one shot at it and that's all it needs. Once the pike is out of the way, you are dead. He simply does not have the dynamic aspect of personal combat in his favour with which to make multiple strikes at your weapon, or make multiple strikes which are defended by your weapon (because a pike is FAR too long to use defensively).


Well, sir, I can do this, so you must be misinformed. Or perhaps I am some kind of freak of nature, gifted with unnatural speed and strength.

Or perhaps there is some other issue at play that is not being taken into consideration which would make your feat of arms vastly different from what would be accomplishable in medieval battlefield conditions. Or perhaps you are lying outright. Or or or. Can't know, because you didn't exactly provide video and a lengthy list of statistics on the situation. And I wasn't there to witness it.

Hey, maybe your cheapy (I mean that term with respect, among the ARMA circles I travel in 'cheapy' refers to a throw-away sword used for practice) simply has a cross-section and weight similar to an axe rather than a REAL sword. Perhaps you hadn't considered that. Actually, judging from the description on the website, that weapon would have virtually nothing in common with a medieval battle-worthy sword.

No one is contesting that axes can't cut wood. But a medieval greatsword is not an axe. And your theatrical blunt likely has more in common with an axe than with a medieval greatsword. I own some practice blades like that, myself. I'd be willing to bet more than one of my practice blades could break some of my real swords outright.
 
Damien said:
Taking little jabs like that is only going to lead to a little pissing match - is that what you want to instigate?

No offense guys, as I know I'm new here, but what do you think this thread has turned into already? You guys have been clanging your historical balls around so loudly the original thread was buried underneath it.
 
No offense guys, as I know I'm new here, but what do you think this thread has turned into already?

Discussion. People can disagree respectfully and intelligently. People can debate facts and points and opinions. While people not quite up on the same knowledge might call it a pissing match, those involved just see it as a conversation. At this point I certainly don't bear him any ill will, and I'm fairly sure he feels the same way. It's when you start insulting each other that it goes downhill, from discussion and debate to a flat out argument.
 
Dont you just love forum duels where people feel the need to show off their superior intelligence?

ForumuserA: "Sir youve insulted me. I demand satisfaction!"
ForumuserB: "Very well sir, we shall settle this with E-peens at dawn!"

:lol:

disclaimer: anything I type on forums is meant in good humour.
 
:P


:cry: You have hurt my feelings, sir. I demand satisfaction!

But really, I think it's fun to debate the finer points. But yeah, it probably is only annoying those people that don't care, and it's off-topic. So I'll shove a cork in it now.

Are -- feel free to post your final thoughts, though. No worries about 'trying to get the last word' or any such thing. It's all good. Or you can PM me if you want to continue the actual discussion. :)


Edit: That was way more smiley faces than I feel comfortable using.
 
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