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  2. Claymore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claymore

    The term claymore is an anglicisation of the Gaelic claidheamh-mòr "big/great sword", attested in 1772 (as Cly-more) with the gloss "great two-handed sword". [3] The sense "basket-hilted sword" is contemporaneous, attested in 1773 as "the broad-sword now used ... called the Claymore, (i.e., the great sword)", [4] although OED observes that this usage is "inexact, but very common".

  3. Basket-hilted sword - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basket-hilted_sword

    The basket-hilted sword was a cut and thrust sword which found the most use in a military context, contrasting with the rapier, the similarly heavy thrust-oriented sword most often worn with civilian dress which evolved from the espada ropera or spada da lato type during the same period. The term "broadsword" was used in the 17th and 18th ...

  4. Gaelic warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_warfare

    These swords were often of very fine construction and quality. Scottish swords continued to use the more traditional "V" cross-guards that had been on pre-Norse Gaelic swords, culminating in such pieces as the now famous "claymore" design. This was an outgrowth of numerous earlier designs, and has become a symbol of Scotland.

  5. Classification of swords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_of_swords

    The Scottish name "claymore" (Scottish Gaelic: claidheamh mór, lit. "large/great sword") [17] [18] can refer to either the longsword with a distinctive two-handed grip, or the basket-hilted sword. [citation needed] The two-handed claymore is an early Scottish version of a greatsword.

  6. Highland charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland_charge

    The Scottish and Irish warrior Alasdair Mac Colla is sometimes credited with inventing the Highland charge during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms [1] to meet a particular set of battlefield challenges. [2] It was initially known as the Irish charge, due to the Irish component of Alasdair Mac Colla's Royalist military invasion of Covenanter Scotland.

  7. Scottish jewellery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_jewellery

    Scottish jewellery is jewellery created in Scotland or in a style associated with Scotland, which today often takes the form of the Celtic style. It is often characterised by being inspired by nature, Scandinavian mythology, and Celtic knot patterns.

  8. Jack Churchill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Churchill

    Jack Churchill (far right) leads a training exercise, sword in hand, from a Eureka boat in Inveraray. In July 1943, as commanding officer, he led No. 2 Commando from their landing site at Catania , in Sicily, with his trademark Scottish broadsword slung around his waist, a longbow and arrows around his neck and his bagpipes under his arm, [ 20 ...

  9. Battle of Stirling Bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Stirling_Bridge

    A two-handed sword [claidheamh dà-làimh, in Gaelic, more commonly claidheamh-mòr or claymore meaning great sword], purporting to be Wallace's, which may contain original metal from his sword blade, was kept by the Scottish kings [19] and is displayed as a relic in the Wallace Monument.