Damien
Mongoose
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.