enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: schlachtschwert long sword

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Longsword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longsword

    A longsword (also spelled as long sword or long-sword) is a type of European sword characterized as having a cruciform hilt with a grip for primarily two-handed use (around 15 to 30 cm or 6 to 12 in), a straight double-edged blade of around 80 to 110 cm (31 to 43 in), and weighing approximately 2 to 3 kg (4 lb 7 oz to 6 lb 10 oz).

  3. Chronology of bladed weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_bladed_weapons

    The longsword emerges in the 14th century, as a military steel weapon of the earlier phase of the Hundred Years' War. It remains identifiable as a type during the period of about 1350 to 1550. [ 32 ] Use of the two-handed Great Sword or Schlachtschwert by infantry (as opposed to their use as a weapon of mounted and fully armoured knights) seems ...

  4. Classification of swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_of_swords

    The term longsword has been used to refer to different kinds of sword depending on historical context: Zweihänder or two-hander, a late Renaissance sword of the 16th century Landsknechte, the longest sword of all; the long "side sword" or "rapier" [5] with a cutting edge (the Elizabethan long sword).

  5. Types of swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_swords

    Spatha: Celtic/Germanic/Roman one-handed double-edged longsword – blade 50–100 cm (20–39 in) – for thrusting and slashing, used by gladiators, cavalry and heavy infantry. 3rd century BCE Gaul/Germania – Migration Period. Xiphos: Greek one-handed, double-edged Iron Age straight shortsword

  6. Oakeshott typology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oakeshott_typology

    Oakeshott types. The Oakeshott typology is a way to define and catalogue the medieval sword based on physical form. It categorises the swords of the European Middle Ages (roughly 11th to 16th centuries [1]) into 13 main types, labelled X through XXII.

  7. German school of fencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_school_of_fencing

    There is evidence that, in the second half of the 16th century, at least a handful of German long sword fencers (Marksbrüder) traveled to England and gave fencing lessons. Frederic Hervey said that "the Imperial German fencers came to Britain to teach their Anglo-Saxon brethren the old and knightly art of fencing".

  8. Feder (fencing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feder_(fencing)

    The Feder (plural Federn; also Fechtfeder, plural Fechtfedern) is a type of training sword used in Fechtschulen (fencing schools) of the German Renaissance.The type has existed since at least the 15th century, but it came to be widely used as a standard training weapon only in the 16th century (when longsword fencing had ceased to have a serious aspect of duelling, as duels were now fought ...

  9. Sword of Stalingrad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sword_of_Stalingrad

    A boy inspects the Sword of Stalingrad in the Battle of Stalingrad Museum, 1953. The Sword of Stalingrad (Russian: Меч Сталингра́да, romanized: Mech Stalingráda) is a bejewelled ceremonial longsword specially forged and inscribed by command of King George VI of the United Kingdom as a token of homage from the British people to the Soviet defenders of the city during the Battle ...

  1. Ads

    related to: schlachtschwert long sword