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  2. Gaelic warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_warfare

    These adaptations and developments brought regular use of other weapons such as lances, poleaxes like the dane axe, lochaber axe, sparth axe and swords like the arming sword and two-handed swords similar to the Scottish Claymore. Many of the medieval swords found in Ireland today are unlikely to be of native manufacture given many of the ...

  3. Historical European martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_European...

    Historical European martial arts. The first page of the Codex Wallerstein shows the typical arms of 15th-century individual combat, including the longsword, rondel dagger, messer, sword -and- buckler, voulge, pollaxe, spear, and staff. Historical European martial arts ( HEMA) are martial arts of European origin, particularly using arts formerly ...

  4. Claymore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claymore

    A claymore ( / ˈkleɪmɔːr /; from Scottish Gaelic: claidheamh - mòr, "great sword") [ 1] is either the Scottish variant of the late medieval two-handed sword or the Scottish variant of the basket-hilted sword. The former is characterised as having a cross hilt of forward-sloping quillons with quatrefoil terminations and was in use from the ...

  5. Buckler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckler

    Buckler front and back Sword and buckler combat, plate from the Tacuinum Sanitatis illustrated in Lombardy, ca. 1390. Irish round shield. A buckler (French bouclier 'shield', from Old French bocle, boucle 'boss') is a small shield, up to 45 cm (up to 18 in) in diameter, gripped in the fist with a central handle behind the boss.

  6. Oakeshott typology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oakeshott_typology

    Oakeshott typology. 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. The historian and illustrator Ewart Oakeshott introduced it in his 1960 treatise The ...

  7. Irish art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_art

    In Ireland, "La Tène ornamented material from the third to fifth centuries AD is difficult to demonstrate [from Ireland]". [1]In the 6th to 8th centuries the art of the newly Christianised Irish mixed with Mediterranean and Germanic traditions through Irish missionary contacts with the Anglo-Saxons, creating what is called Insular art (or the Hiberno-Saxon style) and such masterpieces as the ...

  8. Celtic art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_art

    Early Celtic art is another term used for this period, stretching in Britain to about 150 AD. [2] The Early Medieval art of Britain and Ireland, which produced the Book of Kells and other masterpieces, and is what "Celtic art" evokes for much of the general public in the English-speaking world, is called Insular art in art history. This is the ...

  9. Art in Medieval Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_in_Medieval_Scotland

    Art in Medieval Scotland. The Class II Kirkyard stone c. 800, Aberlemno. In the early Middle Ages, there were distinct material cultures evident in the different federations and kingdoms within what is now Scotland. Pictish art was the only uniquely Scottish medieval style; it can be seen in the extensive survival of carved stones, particularly ...