Swords are WEAK! Advantages, Disadvantages, Armor Combat & HEMA

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  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024

Комментарии • 680

  • @alexh4436
    @alexh4436 3 года назад +59

    There is no better endorsement of a pole arms weapon than to categorically state that even pretending to fight with them is just too dangerous to attempt.

    • @Rokaize
      @Rokaize 3 года назад +7

      Seriously. There’s some armored combat HEMA videos on RUclips. Experienced HEMA practitioners in full armor get knocked out with even competition pole arms. They are serious weapons.

  • @gallendugall8913
    @gallendugall8913 3 года назад +476

    I look forward to a thousand years from now people creating historical or fantasy fiction where entire armies are armed with pistols.

    • @anhtunguyen781
      @anhtunguyen781 3 года назад +63

      full auto ones

    • @book3100
      @book3100 3 года назад +10

      Exactly.

    • @nyax4361
      @nyax4361 3 года назад +36

      actually there were quite a lot army regiments in the 1920s in China armed only with pistols. some of them are full auto ones of course, because of the weapon ban of importing SMGs, carbines etc. so pistols with wood stocks are basically small, short range carbines and SMGs in a way. this trend stopped by the Japanese invasion. the US and European countries decided to lift the weapon ban to arm Chinese army against the Japanese.

    • @perrytran9504
      @perrytran9504 3 года назад +44

      Every one of those soldiers will also dress and talk like a cowboy while using anachronistic handguns.

    • @perrytran9504
      @perrytran9504 3 года назад +51

      @@Ship-security You'll just see a countermovement of people talking about how pistols actually suck and are 100% useless because the rifle was always the better weapon in every context. aka what people do with polearms now.

  • @leppeppel
    @leppeppel 3 года назад +119

    13:15 If I hit a guy in the (helmeted) head several times with a pollaxe and he doesn't go down, I'm not closing in to grapple; I'm running as fast as possible in the other direction!

    • @MusMasi
      @MusMasi 3 года назад +16

      thats not a man you are hitting.......

    • @MusMasi
      @MusMasi 3 года назад +5

      unless you are tapping him very gently

    • @Kanner111
      @Kanner111 3 года назад +8

      Honestly super impressed with the dude who is still standing after getting hit once!

    • @davidlarson242
      @davidlarson242 3 года назад +6

      @@MusMasi It's a trolloc. You are screwed

  • @rodchallis8031
    @rodchallis8031 3 года назад +121

    "Can't we learn something different, like, what if someone came at you with a pointed stick?"
    "POINTED STICK!!?? Well I'll tell you something my lad, when you're walking home tonight and some homicidal maniac comes up to you with a bunch of loganberries DON'T COME CRYING TO ME."

    • @mullac6223
      @mullac6223 3 года назад +6

      Release the tiger!

    • @Nosirrbro
      @Nosirrbro 3 года назад +3

      At least they’ll have learned the banana

    • @DrequAngelic
      @DrequAngelic 3 года назад +1

      In this situation you should address self defending techniques my friend. HEMA is just keeping the history alive and kicking. Cheers!

  • @StergiosMekras
    @StergiosMekras 3 года назад +140

    12 seconds in and I expect something along the lines of "forget about sword, return to stick!"

    • @Likexner
      @Likexner 3 года назад +12

      Reject weaponry
      Return to stik

    • @odysseus9504
      @odysseus9504 3 года назад +8

      Big stick club

    • @random2829
      @random2829 3 года назад +2

      I loved that episode! :D

    • @jonwashburn7999
      @jonwashburn7999 3 года назад +8

      Shadiversity

    • @petermuller3995
      @petermuller3995 3 года назад +5

      @@jonwashburn7999 Shad became a shitpost channel...

  • @TimeMcTraveller
    @TimeMcTraveller 3 года назад +21

    For the longest time, I totally though the barn doors with weapons hanging was just a static image, and Matt was standing in front of a green screen. My mind was blown when he reached into the picture and grabbed that Danish axe!

  • @DurinSBane-zh9hj
    @DurinSBane-zh9hj 3 года назад +16

    "If you hit someone with an axe a couple of times in the head and he doesn't go down, run away" Treatise of Brave Sir Robin

  • @gwennblei
    @gwennblei 3 года назад +61

    I'd just like to point out, at a larp event I took part in 2-3 years ago, someone got concussed and their jaw dislocated after being hit with a foam dane axe, so even making it foam you should be mindful and pull your blows or wear protective equipment ^^

    • @Hostility1812
      @Hostility1812 3 года назад +12

      Nah man be brutal and win the day

    • @gwennblei
      @gwennblei 3 года назад +7

      @LurchTheBastard Even when it's not bad, it's never really pleasing also a trip to the hospital is not great for the immersion ^^, it's better to look after each other before it gets that bad ;)

    • @wwm84
      @wwm84 3 года назад +9

      Flails are banned in the SCA (Society for Creative Anachronism) for the simple reason that it's near impossible to make a "safe" one. Even a tennis ball on a nylon cord can generate enough force to break bones.

    • @widdershins5383
      @widdershins5383 3 года назад +5

      @@wwm84 flails are fucking amazing lol possibly one of the greatest weapons ever made, bless the man who looked at a sling and said, I want that effect on a hand held stick lol

    • @randomthegreat2329
      @randomthegreat2329 3 года назад +1

      I will just leave it here - armored full contact axe fight.
      Looks pretty damn brutal, but it is done apparently:
      ruclips.net/video/Ad5RJ3TeKSE/видео.html

  • @realthings5821
    @realthings5821 3 года назад +33

    With longer pole-arms the forward arm creates a fulcrum around which the entire weight of the lower or rear portion of the pole-arm is brought to bear. Similar to how a pommel works on swords, but the lever is much longer.

  • @lestrike2707
    @lestrike2707 3 года назад +5

    This just echoes what my brother and I figured out about 4 years ago: We usually sparr with plate armour and steel sparring longswords (exhibition fight weapons, if the translation is right). Even with longswords that have a thicker blade and are blunt one cannot strike at full force without hurting your opponent. So we have to use a lot of control which makes our fighting a bit slower than a real fight. We then tried to sparr with a blunted steel spear (boar spear) with a rounded metal tip. we soon discovered that polearms are way quicker than you'd expect, they're way more dangerous and you have to REALLY be careful with those (we used a non flexible wooden staff and we accidentally shattered a shield with the spear).

  • @Matt_Alaric
    @Matt_Alaric 3 года назад +13

    Swords are weak, but flesh is strong.
    THAT is power!

  • @russmitchell3806
    @russmitchell3806 3 года назад +12

    Kudos for emphasizing the intertia factor!

  • @davidgeldner2167
    @davidgeldner2167 3 года назад +16

    Compared to an axe? Absolutely swords don’t innately hit very hard at all. They are weighted for precision and control, not power. No argument here.

    • @kokofan50
      @kokofan50 3 года назад +6

      Different weapons designed to work differently.

  • @WhatIfBrigade
    @WhatIfBrigade 3 года назад +20

    A blunt Dane Axe is still a war hammer.

  • @b-beale1931
    @b-beale1931 3 года назад +26

    I'm sure the anecdote about the 16ft barge pole swung by a thames bargeman vs a rapier on a renowned duellist at some point in the renaissance period(I don't know when and I can't verify if the anecdote is actually a story from the period or something made up to fit) - Spoiler, the duellist loses his head to a blunt but stout piece of wood swung reasonably fast meaning the tip is travelling riduculously fast

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 3 года назад +2

      almost def true. And shows a stupid duellist, or one that wasn't looking.

    • @tkeleth2931
      @tkeleth2931 3 года назад +6

      It's just like the Japanese story about the guy who dueled Musashi who was using a boat oar and killed the guy

    • @zigzaghyena
      @zigzaghyena 3 года назад +7

      It occurs to me now that the phrase "Knocking their block off" may actually be based on somebody decapitating a guy with blunt force alone.

    • @PXCharon
      @PXCharon 3 года назад +4

      I think that was the death of Rocco Bonetti? One of the London Masters of Defense, at any rate.

    • @b-beale1931
      @b-beale1931 3 года назад +1

      @@PXCharon that sounds about right to me

  • @Xion_Toshiro
    @Xion_Toshiro 3 года назад +6

    "Hold on... gotta Sharpen my Hammer..."
    ~ Hammer Mains in Monster Hunter, since 2004

  • @GladstnJones
    @GladstnJones 3 года назад +14

    Over appreciated weapons: The sword.

    • @wecx2375
      @wecx2375 3 года назад +2

      Under appreciated weapon: Cuckoldry.

  • @jm9371
    @jm9371 3 года назад +7

    Wow.. I learned something. Don't smack someone with a Blunt Dane Axe in jest, you will probably kill them.

  • @b.h.abbott-motley2427
    @b.h.abbott-motley2427 3 года назад +3

    I'm sure you know this, but 7-8lbs is on the heavy end for halberds & pollaxes. There are lots of surviving halberds in museums that weight 5lbs or under. 4.5-6lbs would be the common range for halberds 1400-1550, with a few heavier or lighter than that. (Of course, lightness wasn't necessarily desirable for halberds; Raimond de Fourquevaux complained about some of them being too light.)

  • @SledgeOfHouseHammer
    @SledgeOfHouseHammer 3 года назад +21

    9:33 If a sword is blunt... You have stick! - Shad Brooks 2021

    • @samolofsson2401
      @samolofsson2401 3 года назад +1

      A bad stick, would much rather have a equaly long 2' thick stick in my hands

    • @Aquilenne
      @Aquilenne 3 года назад +2

      "Stick very good" - Shad Brooks 2021

    • @davidbrennan660
      @davidbrennan660 3 года назад +1

      The next video will be the “Efficiency of Cardboard as armour”, no doubt. I

  • @thekaxmax
    @thekaxmax 3 года назад +2

    even the SCA, using 2" rattan poles, require 2"-4" of soft padding on the striking surfaces of polearms. A long stick is a long stick.
    History note: a staff, full length, is a 20'-24' pole used in thatch roofing and was sometimes used by highwaymen as a weapon. Allows you to strike a coachman while standing behind your protective tree. So a quarterstaff is 1/4 of that, about 6'.

    • @Scuzzlebutt142
      @Scuzzlebutt142 3 года назад

      This is interesting and useful information (the quaterstaff), I did not know this. And also aren't fibreglass weapons a thing in SCA Heavy, though more around thrusting weapons?

    • @stevenscott2136
      @stevenscott2136 3 года назад +1

      That's the third explanation of "quarterstaff" I've seen, and the coolest.

  • @eliane2743
    @eliane2743 3 года назад +1

    Thanks a lot for all the information conveyed by the video.

  • @mathuaerknedam5826
    @mathuaerknedam5826 3 года назад +3

    10:39 feels like a nod to Shad's recent video "Underappreciated historical weapons: THE STICK!!".

  • @Fields_gg
    @Fields_gg 3 года назад +3

    Very useful! Please keep doing more videos like this!

  • @Marvbunks
    @Marvbunks 3 года назад +5

    Hey Matt! If an apocalypse broke loose (you can choose one or many) and you had to leave your home, with which of your weapons would you equip yourself?

  • @jeydonfal1
    @jeydonfal1 3 года назад +2

    Early 13th century / earlier swords had the balance point a lot further from the hand than their successors because they had more of an offensive role which put the emphasize on the cut. Matt himself compared his dynasty forge type 10a arming sword with its 6" center of gravity offset to a sharpened crowbar lol.
    Not saying it would hit harder than a dane axe, but it certainly pack a wallop and would probably be able to kill even if it was blunt.
    Sorry for the english :)

  • @kazikek2674
    @kazikek2674 3 года назад +1

    Thing that fantasy artist learned : MAKE BIG FANCY HEAVIER SWORDS
    On a more serious note, the 'fencing' aspects of sword's mass arrangement has its advantages as most of the other weapons (which Matt explained multiple times too), especially the percussive ones, are not that mobile compared to some post-migration era swords, but it can Only help so much against those percussive weapons.
    And I'l confess my heartbeat quickened when Matt brought the bill close to the dane axe and that back spike seemed to be hovering close to this palm :p

  • @mycatistypingthis5450
    @mycatistypingthis5450 3 года назад +2

    I would say that hitting someone in the fencing mask full force with a quarter staff might result in neck injury, but there's a good chance that'll be determined on the autopsy table.

  • @peterpeychinov8762
    @peterpeychinov8762 3 года назад +4

    A blunted sword, designed to do damage when sharp, is weaker than polearm weapons, designed to deliver blunt force trauma, in an environment that favors defeating heavily armored opponents by felling and concussing them and forbids stabbing and thrusting. Also, grass is usually green.
    Now, before you consider me a hater, swords in general are designed to kill, with the least possible energy exertion. HEMA and "Battle of the Nations" are tournaments and sport events. You want to defeat the opponent, who is, in general, more armored than the English King at Agincourt. Of course you want to use a blunt trauma weapon. You don't want to kill them!

  • @johnree6106
    @johnree6106 3 года назад +43

    Which is why swords were not a knights main weapon

    • @mooncorp212
      @mooncorp212 3 года назад +4

      It depends on what level, and in which period. It is their main weapon, symbolically speaking (with its christian cross symbolism, knighting ceremonies, etc), and symbols were sufficient for a lot of people in high middle-age.

    • @johnree6106
      @johnree6106 3 года назад +2

      @@mooncorp212 Agreed with what you say. It was symbolic and it does depend on the time period.

    • @Likexner
      @Likexner 3 года назад +2

      Zweihänder: Am I a joke to you?

    • @johnree6106
      @johnree6106 3 года назад +7

      @@Likexner Yes you are

    • @chengkuoklee5734
      @chengkuoklee5734 3 года назад +2

      Sword is not the end, it's a mean. The reason to have sword training is to train reflex & agility.

  • @jadenburgess7967
    @jadenburgess7967 3 года назад +1

    In your latest video "Big Stick Energy" you mentioned how the power of a quarterstaff could be significantly reduced by wearing a helmet but here you mention it could still provide injury. Is that just in the matter of sportsmanship or the type of helmet or a separate issue? Love your content man!

  • @stanlim9182
    @stanlim9182 3 года назад +3

    Moment of Inertia, *I = mass*radius^2*, is an object resistance to rotation. A higher moment of Inertia means more force is required to decelerate it thus, a high moment of Inertia means more stopping power and vice versa. As shown in the formula the mass affects an object inertia, not speed. To increase stopping power/moment of Inertia, one could either increase the weapon mass or increase the radius of the axis of rotation(distance between the hands to the centre of balance).
    A sword has a low moment of inertia as the radius between the hands and centre of balance is small, a lower moment of Inertia means it’s easier to accelerate as there’s less force/resistance to rotate the object. Furthermore, the formula for rectangular objects are, *Inertia = (width*height^3)/12 *, that’s why swords with a rectangular profile such as an Oakshott X are tip heavy. To make a sword more nimble the moment of Inertia must be reduce thus it either have to reduce in height/length or decrease in either the blade width or thickness (or a combination of the two). That’s why distill and profile tapering a sword makes it more nimble as tapering decreases the width and thickness to reduce the sword moment of Inertia.
    Additionally, the moment of Inertia can be reduce if the centre of gravity is closer to the axis of rotation (the hands). *Centre of Mass = [Sum of (mass*distance from object boundary)]/total mass* . Again tapering the sword helps to reduce the mass thereby moving the centre of balance towards the hilt.
    PS: I think using the Parallel Axis Theorem might be more accurate for analysis, please feel free to correct me.

    • @henriknemeth3370
      @henriknemeth3370 3 года назад

      That should also mean, that since it is easier to rotate objects with low moment of inertia, one can get a sword up to a greater velocity, right? And since we know that kinetic energy does the damage, and it is calculazed by multiplying 1/2 of said objects apparent mass at a given point by its velocity squared at that point, that would mean that the difference isnt all that big. For example, lets have a sword with an effective mass of 400g at the tip moving at 25m/s. It is going to have roughly the same amount of kinetic energy as a 2000g object moving at 11 m/s. The question is, how big a difference the different rotational characteristics of these different objects make in regards to their velocity. I would be interested in what you think about this subject.

    • @stanlim9182
      @stanlim9182 3 года назад

      ​@@henriknemeth3370 I agree that a nimble weapon can reach the same KE as a tip heavy weapon via high acceleration. However, this also mean it's easier to decelerate a nimble weapon thus making it easier to do a static block whereas a weapon with high moments of inertia may be slower but it's harder to block/defend against it. (Skalligrim done a video of quarterstaff vs longsword and it just broke the longsword guard with a slow swing of the quaterstaff). This means that a tip heavy weapon can bash through the guard of another sword and has a stronger guard/defence in theory.
      In practice it takes less effort to reach a high KE with a tip heavy weapon than a nimble weapon as more effort is needed to accelerate the weapon (Though one might say that more effort is needed to accelerate a tip heavy weapon, but once the tip heavy weapon is in motion it's easy to maintain the acceleration/momentum). That's why less skilled soldiers uses the falchion and Dao as it required less effort to dealt a large damage to the enemy. Also a tip heavy weapon doesn't need to travel that fast to dealt a generate a large KE and, most Dao and Falchion techniques causes the sword to "fall towards the opponent" instead of mainly accelerating with the arms (If I'm not mistaken about the techniques).
      Furthermore, tip heavy weapons are forgiving cutters as a high moment of inertia helps the sword to retain momentum through the cuts. The common soldiers are conscripted farmers or civilians, normally they don't spent a lot of time practicing cutting therefore they use choppy swords.
      PS: I think I got side-tracked when writing this. Apologies for that.

    • @henriknemeth3370
      @henriknemeth3370 3 года назад

      @@stanlim9182 That makes a lot of sense. I still find rhis video a bit ,well i would not go as far as to say misleading, because it is obvious that Matt is trying to teach these basics about weapin phisycs to those not at all familiar with them, but my point is, that it is about swords, when it should be about every other single handed melee weapon too. For example, i cant see why a typical one handed viking axe, at a weight of 800-900 g and a length of 60-70 cm would achieve greater KE just by the virtue of it being tip heavy, than an exceptionally heavy, lets say 1,6 kg viking sword with a length of 90 cm.

    • @stanlim9182
      @stanlim9182 3 года назад +1

      @@henriknemeth3370 Matt did mention he done A-level physics many years ago in his older videos. Though he did mention he forgotten a bunch of theory as it's been quite a while.
      A one handed axe may not be as powerful as a long heavy viking sword but it's more affordable than a sword as well as generating enough KE to get the job done.

    • @TheChiconspiracy
      @TheChiconspiracy 3 года назад +1

      @@henriknemeth3370 One thing to not forget is even if a sword is moving as fast on paper to make up for the lack of mass of a polearm, axe, or hammer, it's pretty much guaranteed that it will lose a massive amount of that force thanks to the flexibility of most sword blades compared to a thicker piece of metal on a stout haft.

  • @Pfhreak
    @Pfhreak 3 года назад +6

    "Is it as effective as a baseball bat? Probably not." *Harley Quinn liked this*

  • @G1NZOU
    @G1NZOU 3 года назад +2

    Swords in a battlefield of armoured knights and men at arms feel like the equivalent of a submachine gun or pistol to a modern soldier when the rifle is his polearm.
    Great as a backup, and you can take it with you into buildings worn at your side when in other cases your larger weapon you'd leave behind, or when travelling and you just need a sidearm.

  • @alexh4436
    @alexh4436 3 года назад +4

    You mentioned that swords rely on their sharpness or they aren't very useful. How much time was spent sharpening swords in the ancient world. What were the tools. Were their specialists to this task? It seems like their may have been lots of logistics in maintaining cutting weapons. way back then.

  • @Idrisapbran
    @Idrisapbran 3 года назад +1

    I come from SCA heavy fighting and some HEMA on the side, we have to use softer heads on our pole weapons, axes, and maces in order to make the "safe" and they are still more dangerous then swords in our sport. Also our armor is somewhere in between BotN and HEMA including steel helms though we have more sport bar grills then full helms like BotN.

  • @nowthenzen
    @nowthenzen 3 года назад +51

    "Swords are weak" .. Matt making the Internet Cry

    • @chengkuoklee5734
      @chengkuoklee5734 3 года назад +4

      If we view dps, indeed weak. Does it make it less DEADLY? No.

    • @danieldbdb
      @danieldbdb 3 года назад +5

      Swords got famous because they were difficult to make and expensive. But they were easily nullified by armor and were weaker than other weapons.

    • @chroma6947
      @chroma6947 3 года назад +6

      @@danieldbdb That is wrong. Many swords were made for soldiers without a lot of money. A soldier could afford a falchion with simple guard in 2 weeks.

    • @VinceMenger
      @VinceMenger 3 года назад +8

      @@danieldbdb Swords were most likely very useful in self defense/edc, polearms better suited for battlefields.

    • @williamt.sherman9841
      @williamt.sherman9841 3 года назад +2

      @@VinceMenger Swords were very effective on battlefields. this stuff about "swords are weak" is common sense- they ARE NOT bludgeoning weapons the entire point of a sword is it is sharp and can cut and thrust. A dane axe is not more lethel then a sword- If you are stabbed in the neck or have your arm lopped off both will cause fatal wounds.
      Swords don't have the reach and they rely on cutting to be lethal. But reach is not the most important thing in every context and NOT in a pitched battle where there is not always room to use pol weapons.
      The videos point about swords balance being near the hand is a good thing for flexibility since it allow rapid one handed thrusts.
      If you are using a Shield with a one handed Spear you will not get the level of flexibility that you have with a sword.
      if you are using a two handed weapon then you don't get a shield- which before the development of full body armor were not as common.
      This idea that swords don't work is nonsense.

  • @jaketheasianguy3307
    @jaketheasianguy3307 3 года назад +6

    I can see this kind of discussion already been made in the past. That's why in history, tip heavy sword like the Falchion or a few versions of Japanese Tachi were made

    • @wonniethepoop7856
      @wonniethepoop7856 3 года назад

      Probably you are wrong about falchions. As I know this type of swords has very thin and sharp blade. It was designed to cut unarmored or lightly-armored (gambeson like) people. So, swords are still weak including falchion.

  • @seedmole
    @seedmole 3 года назад +1

    Short handle -> short distance between hands -> small lever for gripping -> low mechanical advantage
    Long handle -> long distance between hands -> large lever for gripping -> high mechanical advantage!
    Basically, as long as the reach of the weapon is to be maximized, the handle length will need to be short, if an overall maximum length is not to be exceeded -- there's always a trade-off between extra leverage and blade length. But if you allow the weapon's overall length to be greater, you can have both the leverage in grip and the length in the working end.. and what does such a weapon resemble? Pole weapons. Obviously there are very many other factors in determining what makes something effective or not, but in terms of force multiplication and all that, longer handles and longer "blades" both help, and so the classic trope of a hero wielding a one-handed sword and shield to win the day seems full of holes.

  • @jonathanbetenbender307
    @jonathanbetenbender307 3 года назад +1

    At the end should have mentioned their nimbleness. With the weight closer to the hands it's easier to be precise and correct/adjust your attack.

  • @cocobunitacobuni8738
    @cocobunitacobuni8738 3 года назад +1

    This was very informative, thank you. Another weakness of the sword is that it breaks very easily (especially when not getting the cut right), the blades can knick or bend and also it requires a lot of skill to actually cut correctly. Give me a spear any day of the week.

  • @CDKohmy
    @CDKohmy 3 года назад +3

    Related, everyone focuses on the helmet or sometimes breastplate. What about arms? I'd like to see tests against arm harness with polearms and with large type XIII swords. One thing, would one feel a hit to the funny bone? I ask as the Harley manuscript is smoetimes thought to imply armour and strikes to the elbows,, neck, and hands.

    • @b.h.abbott-motley2427
      @b.h.abbott-motley2427 3 года назад +2

      Pietro Monte & Juan Quijada de Reayo both pointed to this dynamic of injuring the arms with cavalry impact weapons (maces/hammers) as I recall.

  • @gwynbleidd1917
    @gwynbleidd1917 2 года назад

    Hey, Matt is your English bill made with wootz steel? Or just rusty? Lol it looked like wootz or some interesting patterning on the head of it. Also, great video as always!

  • @Aurora2097
    @Aurora2097 3 года назад +1

    This is really intetesting. Is there actually something like a realistic electronic simulation for different kinds of weapons and armor?

  • @Blaisem
    @Blaisem 3 года назад

    When you mention danish axes and inertia, the word that should be used in place of inertia is torque. The wikipedia article for torque has some good images. In short, torque is the force (newtons, i.e., mass x acceleration) multiplied by the length. A longer haft multiplies the force more, leading to a greater torque. So with torque we are covering the mass, the acceleration, and the length, basically all the 3 variables you care about when comparing the relative damage dealt by different medieval weapons arcing through the air. Well, all except for the cross-section of impact, such as a spike vs a hammer.
    Technically, torque is a cross product, which in our case basically means that its moment of inertia or "rotational mass" is being accounted for; in other words, the weight being balanced toward the site of impact is also a part of torque. Torque is the work horse you want to saddle up for these conversations, as it covers the most variables in one elegant term.
    The wikipedia description refers to torque as the rotational analog of linear force. So if you want to talk about force in a rotational context, torque would be the succinct single-word alternative to rotational energy or angular momentum.

  • @Stigstigster
    @Stigstigster 3 года назад +3

    I like to think of the sword, in certain eras and places and _contexts,_ as equivalent to the pistol of today. Can I put the dagger up as the pocket pistol?

  • @btrenninger1
    @btrenninger1 3 года назад +3

    All true. I still bear injuries to my neck from a hit from a foam axe while fighting SCA. Through a sallet and gorget too. Clocked me pretty proper.

    • @Taeerom
      @Taeerom 3 года назад +1

      This is why I subscribe to the "fight softly" school of reenactment fighting. Carrying more armour, having stricter regulations on equipment and so on will still give you concussions and whiplashes from polearms. When everyone is intent on "tap fighting" and wears as little protective gear they can get away with (to move faster), you end up in a much safer environment. A battlefield full of people that can't see well, are restricted in movement and control, and feel invincible is a recipe for lasting injuries.
      In my opinion there are only two ways you can go about having realistic fighting. You can have realistic techniques in a highly regulated duel scenario with anachronistic protective gear (HEMA). Or you can have realistic gear and group dynamics, but with anachronistic techniques (tap fighting).
      Personally, I don't enjoy individual sports, so I do reenactment fighting wearing toothguard, cup and gauntlets as only protective gear. Most dangerous injury was from crashing into a teammates shield, cutting my nose (one stich), and I've been doing this for years. I don't think I've heard about concussions, whiplashes or anything like that. Most serious is fingers (always a danger when not having good enough gauntlets) and teeth (wear a toothguard, always), both due to inadequate gear.

    • @Taeerom
      @Taeerom 3 года назад

      @Gabriel Bido Bruises are also gonna happen in a "fight safely" approach. Bruises are fine. Broken bones are potentially very serious injuries, at times career-ending injuries and should not be accepted so light-heartedly as you do.
      But broken bones is not all that the "tough guys" get. Head injuries and concussions are common because of all the heavy head hits. No visible injury, doesn't mean it is safe. NFL football, boxing, even association football have started to realize that repeated knocks on the head has severe long term implications.
      Go ask Alan Shearer if it is smart to have someone hit you in the helmet as hard as they manage. His problem has been heading a relatively soft and light football. Your brain is gonna take similar beating from a sword through a helmet. Even when there is no visible injury at the time.

    • @Taeerom
      @Taeerom 3 года назад

      ​@Gabriel Bido There is a thing you need to keep in mind, authentically reenacting a medieval battle is the same as fighting a medieval battle. The only way to make it realistic is to have people die. We obviously don't want that.
      In order to safely do any of the different ways to simulate medieval combat, we have to find compromises so that we can explore the aspects of combat we wish to explore. In most HEMA settings, the goal is to study blossfechten techniques in a duelling setting, and have rules, equipment, and ways of fighting to accomodate that. I don't find duels interesting, I want battles. In some systems, like the SCA heavy fighting, there are battles, but the rules require immense amount of armour and the use of rattan sticks rather than swords.
      By having a culture of fighting safely and a ruleset that encourages relatively light fighting, I can partake in large battles in historic gear (for Viking age and earlier, that means almost no armour for almost everyone), without compromising my own safety and the safety of the people I fight with. For me, using a fencing mask is hindering my ability to reenact the manouvering and communication of the battlefield. But the tradeoff is that we can't stab each other in the face - likely the most common technique used in war.
      It isn't more realistic with heavier fighting, it is just compromising different aspects of combat.
      I also do not compare what I do (group focused western style reenactment combat) with combat sports often. I compare it with contact sports with teams. What I do is in many ways closer to lacrosse or handball (rough teamgames were the physical violence is undercommunicated in their marketing) than to MMA or boxing. Combat sports that focus on duels are very different in how you play the game than teamgames, and that is a bigger difference than how closely the sport resembles combat. For me, positioning and teamwork are more important to win than how well you defend and attack on an individual level.

  • @frederik7338
    @frederik7338 3 года назад

    I 100% second Matts remarks on the dangerous power in polearms. In the reantactment group i used to frequent, we used steel headed spears (with a flat golf ball sized tip), with ash shafts. Like Matt says it meant spearmen had to tailor their thrusting technique to minimize impact (especially since we don't wear armor or padding on the torso (the target for spears). Essentially they use them like they were "playing pool/snooker" (only powering the thrust with the back hand and using minimal engergy behind it, while using the other to aim). Even those minimized thrusts will knock the wind from your lungs, and can leave quite a bruise. Also, if the flat tip breaks, these spears will pierce your flesh and cause scars.

  • @davidsevcik3092
    @davidsevcik3092 3 года назад +62

    Even the peasants equipped with polearms like flails or "sudlice" were able to defeat mounted knights in large battles. Terrifying weapons.

    • @czarus_the_sniper9924
      @czarus_the_sniper9924 3 года назад +21

      "Sudlice" - billhook

    • @Finnv893
      @Finnv893 3 года назад +2

      Numbers

    • @chroma6947
      @chroma6947 3 года назад +1

      And a simple bow would lay them down before they even got within 30m so your point??

    • @baronprocrastination1722
      @baronprocrastination1722 3 года назад +6

      @@chroma6947 unless they have plate armor. Or any arnor really. Even a 200lbs longbow would struggle with killing a fully armored knight _immediately,_ but they can do it faster than weaker bows, at least.

    • @kh3rb
      @kh3rb 3 года назад

      @@baronprocrastination1722 not if you hit mail.

  • @davidkenyon376
    @davidkenyon376 3 года назад +26

    All this is well and good. Still don't want to be hit with a sharp sword.

    • @schibleh531
      @schibleh531 3 года назад +12

      Welp to be fair, you wouldn't want to be hit with a sharp anything if you are unarmored.

    • @Alex_Fahey
      @Alex_Fahey 3 года назад +10

      Frankly, I don't want to be hit with a blunt anything either. Slapping also hurts a bit, too.

    • @samolofsson2401
      @samolofsson2401 3 года назад +3

      I would hate to get hit whit a whip and there is no sharp anything there. Fuck it i would hate to get hit whit a fist and hopefully there is no sharp points there eighter.

  • @jttcosmos
    @jttcosmos 3 года назад +1

    Excellent demonstration of the force behind such weapons is Dr Toby Capwell being whacked on the head with a dense rubber foam pollaxe. He is in full armour for ground combat, and yet is still knocked out for a moment. You can see it at around 1:15 of the "Tournament of the Phoenix" video from 2012 (ruclips.net/video/Xzh5P9go0KI/видео.html).

  • @KJ-kw7gh
    @KJ-kw7gh 3 года назад +1

    I have absolutely no experience in fighting with swords, pole arms, etc. But my feeling is this: If artillery has failed, (bows, catapults, trebuchets, etc.) cavalry has failed, and long arms have failed, then it’s a real SHTF situation if you must use a sword.

  • @timlewis5527
    @timlewis5527 3 года назад +10

    Man leverage gets thrown around a lot here when length would be more appropriate. Same rotational speed but longer length = higher velocity. A short poleaxe has greater leverage ratio than a long one.

  • @MarcusVance
    @MarcusVance 3 года назад +3

    It's really funny how the weapon that likes killed the most knights and men-at-arms was the bollocks dagger.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 3 года назад

      yes, none of the other weapons worked directly so you got him down and bypassed the armour. Not funny at all. :P

    • @cocobunitacobuni8738
      @cocobunitacobuni8738 3 года назад

      or Saex

  • @shawn6860
    @shawn6860 3 года назад +2

    So this makes me wonder if I should be worrying about the clerics and wizards with quarterstaves. that metal tip aside, would staff and spear be comparable in the amount of force they thrust with? Looks to me that metal tip like a sword blade is more penetration and less force.

  • @navigator5426
    @navigator5426 3 года назад +35

    Instructor: "And so in order to ensure everyones complete safety we will be sparring with pool noodles from now on. Oi, where's everyone going? ".

    • @willek1335
      @willek1335 3 года назад

      I don't know why, but that made me sad. Like comparing chihuahua and wolf. What happened..

    • @Earthenfist
      @Earthenfist 3 года назад +1

      I mean... that's basically Dagorhir or Belegarth. Full-contact, full-force fighting, with softened weapons, allowing for non-armored combat. Definitely fun.

    • @Razz150
      @Razz150 3 года назад

      Lol

    • @danielniffenegger7698
      @danielniffenegger7698 3 года назад +1

      Except that pool noodles are dangerous! Don’t you know that?!! What if someone hits just right and the other person looses an I?!! Oh wait, we can’t let kids be aggressive or physical! (Being facetious).

    • @Earthenfist
      @Earthenfist 3 года назад

      @@danielniffenegger7698 No, see, they thought of that! One of the rules is that none of the weapons can be small enough around to fit through an eye socket!
      So what if that makes it look like you're fighting with oversized popsicles and q-tips, it's safe!
      (Real rule, tho. I recognize your facetiousness.)

  • @stormiewutzke4190
    @stormiewutzke4190 3 года назад +3

    I have been wanting you to cover the pros and cons of the one handed vs two handed and how body mechanics fit in. I feel as though one handed swords are better most of the time in unarmored combat.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 3 года назад

      why?

    • @stanlim9182
      @stanlim9182 3 года назад

      More reach, easier to grab with the offhand and have the option to stand more sideways to expose your body less when using a one handed sword.

    • @b.h.abbott-motley2427
      @b.h.abbott-motley2427 3 года назад +1

      George Silver thought there was no question that weapons made to be used with two hands had the advantage over single-handed swords. He had a very high opinion of the two-handed sword. The sort of two-handed sword Silver had in mind was probably similar to the bigger longsword feders used today. Gérard Thibault's two-handed sword appears to have been about the same, though perhaps a bit larger. He gave a method for defeating the two-handed sword with the single rapier, but implied that the two-handed sword has the advantage. The same section has instruction for triumphing with single rapier over rapier & dagger & rapier & target. No body could credibly assert that the single rapier has the advantage over rapier plus something else, & Thibault even explicitly wrote that the weapons addressed in that section had some sort of advantage over the single rapier.

  • @charlesdrew3947
    @charlesdrew3947 3 года назад +1

    I think the word you were searching for when saying leverage was moment force.

  • @throwabrick
    @throwabrick 3 года назад +2

    Random polearm question:
    Was there any specific weapon that was a combined spear and mace? Like, a slightly shorter spear, with the other end a solid metal basher of some sort, a hand-and-a-half kind of thing, could be used like a one handed spear with shield.

    • @Vlad_Tepes_III
      @Vlad_Tepes_III 3 года назад

      There was the goedendag, but it was more of a combined spear and club.

    • @sebastianriemer1777
      @sebastianriemer1777 3 года назад

      Poleaxe comes to mind. A scary thing it is.

  • @nickolas474
    @nickolas474 3 года назад +1

    Although this is a very important and useful message, I can't help but feel that the main thrust of the argument is that a blunt weapon can't really be blunted.

  • @markfergerson2145
    @markfergerson2145 3 года назад +2

    Shad did a video about the mighty Stick, in which he points out exactly the same thing- the stick is the foundation of many weapons (as well as being a decent weapon in its own right) but not swords- they don't apply momentum as well as does a girthy stick of similar length.

    • @danieldbdb
      @danieldbdb 3 года назад

      Don't like this guy

    • @markfergerson2145
      @markfergerson2145 3 года назад

      @@danieldbdb Are you telling people not to like me?
      Are you saying *you* don't like me, or Shad, or Matt, or someone else?
      Is English not your first language?

  • @CraigLYoung
    @CraigLYoung 3 года назад +7

    Thank you, you just ( very elegantly) made Shad's point in his last video.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 3 года назад

      seein' they're both right....

  • @kennetth1389
    @kennetth1389 3 года назад +1

    In SCA fighting, polearms are limited to 90° swings only for this very reason.
    While we wear steel, leather & padding. And strike each other full force.
    No one wants to receive a full swing.
    Edit: hold on, you spar without wearing gorgets?
    Are y'all insane?

  • @celestialsalamander
    @celestialsalamander 3 года назад +1

    the tital is a bit ambiguous. I did not know if you were referring to the formidableness or the literal physical durability of swords.

  • @30Salmao
    @30Salmao 3 года назад

    I am a civil engeniering and think a lot about safe materials to sparring. I was thinking about this shaft isue with spears and have an idea, check if you like it:
    Maybe you can use the historical (rigid) shaft of ash with a long and hard rubber (like a 50 cm or a 100 cm of rubber), if the rubber is rigid enought but flex to the side when you stab, it should work. I don't know the kind of rubber you shoul use, but I garantee if you get bigger than 20 cm you get much less problems in thrusts because it will bend or deflect away. The problem will be to fix the rubber into the shaft without tear it in the fist hit.
    I think also that the control with the point will be less reliable, but maybe control with the weak of the spear is not a good idea anyways. Otherwise maybe the bind of the spear with such a rubber head maybe too strange and you will fell less or none of the contact thru your contact, you should watch out for this too. That's a tradeoff, no doubt about it. Trying might be nice.
    Cheers from Brazil.

  • @VernonKun
    @VernonKun 3 года назад +2

    A topic that I expect to see in this video but probably is good for another: how would you estimate the endurability of various weapons? e.g. I think maces don't break as fast or as often as swords but I am interested in other comparisons as well, such as axes vs swords.

    • @Michael-jx9bh
      @Michael-jx9bh 3 года назад

      Durability is/was probably something of a side issue for cheap weapons - and (lowend) polearms were cheap. As for maces - it depends on the materials - bronze or iron maces would deform or crack. As a modern example look at sledgehammers - some will have a mushroomed striking face after hard use.
      Probably if you put a lump of iron with a lot of inclusions on the end of a stick it will crack or even just fall apart fairly quickly. So there was such a thing as too cheap.

    • @Taeerom
      @Taeerom 3 года назад

      No weapon has a shorter life expetancy than the person wielding it at any point in history. Life expectancy when actively fighting is ridicolusly short, it is measured in minutes. Surviving a battle was probably not that rare, but surviving having to actually use your weapon is.
      Remember, for every time you strike at someone with a sword, there will be one that is gravely wounded or dead shortly afterwards. Either you or the person you struck. You can survive that encounter, or a few if oyu are lucky and skilled. But you will not survive enough encounters that the durability of oyur weapon will be a disadvantage.

    • @cocobunitacobuni8738
      @cocobunitacobuni8738 3 года назад

      a very relevant question and in my opinion that is exactly another weakness of the sword (along with the skill it takes to use it). The can bend, knick and break.

    • @VernonKun
      @VernonKun 3 года назад

      @@Taeerom I suppose if the user is well-armored and fight in good formation and with good skill and tactics, it wouldn't be so rare for the weapon to break first.

  • @davidjordan2446
    @davidjordan2446 3 года назад +1

    I remember getting hit for the first time in armor with a blunted sword. there is defiantly a pause to think.... wow that was it?

  • @seanduffy6231
    @seanduffy6231 3 года назад

    We fence with rigid ash spearshafts and it's true, we get frequently injured lightly, even without a metal spear tip.

  • @ishitrealbad3039
    @ishitrealbad3039 3 года назад +2

    Swords are great for grappling, for when people wear armor.
    I mean there's a reason why knights used Poleaxes and Polehammers extensively as their primary weapon.

  • @takingbacktoxic7898
    @takingbacktoxic7898 3 года назад +7

    The bec de corbin would be the weapon I would fear the most. Owning one has been very enlightening when it comes to weaponry.

    • @widdershins5383
      @widdershins5383 3 года назад +2

      Do you wanna crush something? Done
      Do you wanna pierce something? Done
      Do you want both? Done
      Lol

  • @miguelpartida1672
    @miguelpartida1672 3 года назад

    How do you feel about Viking reenactors using Dane axes and simply just blunted axes when most of us don’t wear mail or helmets. Seeing as most kits are not wealthy enough for it?

  • @Blaisem
    @Blaisem 3 года назад

    I've seen some competitive team hema melees on RUclips where people are dressed in plate armor and wielding pollaxes. Are measures taken to tame the power of pollaxes in these fights? Some of them seem to be thwacking pretty good with them.

  • @inspectorcal
    @inspectorcal 3 года назад +3

    if you believe this is true "in the real world swords are definitely not weak" why do you insist your HEMA is the closest to real medieval combat that you can possibly get?

  • @JosephKerr27
    @JosephKerr27 3 года назад +1

    Rattan might as well be balsa when used as a staff. I've had a few and literally broke a bo across my ribs when I practiced with too much "conviction" (during kata, not kumite). Looks beautiful, but quite useless against other weapons. Rattan is perfect for escrima, though. Different woods for different needs.

  • @mikemartin9833
    @mikemartin9833 3 года назад +5

    Here early, my recommendations said 15 seconds, quell chance.

  • @Ksennie
    @Ksennie 3 года назад +1

    Would the leaf - getting a bit more 'bulbous' shaped towards the tip- shape of some Greek swords and certain types of Gladius' have increased the inertia of them in a useful way?

    • @cocobunitacobuni8738
      @cocobunitacobuni8738 3 года назад

      I would think so, if you look at some scimitars and falchions as well as the eastern/middle eastern swords, back swords etc. If the emphasis is on hacking the weight is good. The gladius I think would be more of a stabbing/thrust weapon so you dont really need the heavy tips.

  • @petersmythe6462
    @petersmythe6462 3 года назад

    Interesting you mention spears to the face are problematic. I know when we went to the park and used "boffers" (foamed plastic pipes) we had to standardize how padding on the tip was doing to make thrusts viable, and even then the head and neck were considered invulnerable to discourage attacks there. I think we required 4 inches of padding on the end of a pipe.

    • @petersmythe6462
      @petersmythe6462 3 года назад

      it also probably helps that kids are not really generating the forces needed to do as much and technique was more based on whatever people thought might let them win than anything formal.

  • @jay_chang
    @jay_chang 3 года назад +4

    Actually in the Chinese civilization swords (the jian 剑)
    Was replaced by dao (saber) pretty early in Han dynasty, with emergence of armour
    Maces and spiked club (bone club 骨朵, hammers 锤, wolf fang club 狼牙棒)
    Are weapons made for armour.
    The most direct upgrade to the jian 剑 is the jian 锏 (no pun intended, but the two weapons sounded similar.
    ruclips.net/video/oLNO4KnQI5s/видео.html
    The weight is about 2-4 times that of a sword, basically a square prism of hard metal with a pointy tip, it can bash armour without being damaged and thrust through armour with the heavier inertial.
    Still it definitely dwarf in comparison to the halberd 戟
    Which have about 10 foot pole on it and used in formation
    Or even crossbows which the historical range is about 180 meter or so.
    This is drama "reenactment" on a historical battle, the uniform, armour and weapons
    Are historically accurate to the relics being dug up.
    Battle between Wang Jian (Qin) and Xiang Yan (Chu)
    That is the last few battles before unification of China in around 220 BC
    ruclips.net/video/muAbSCaLOoA/видео.html
    Swords have limited use in formation and "short weapons" like axe and clubs are usually
    Backup weapons.

    • @matthewwong6918
      @matthewwong6918 3 года назад

      @@jacquesstrapp3219 I suspect he was referring to swords as used in Ancient China. In Rome tacrics would have been different

    • @jay_chang
      @jay_chang 3 года назад

      ​@@jacquesstrapp3219
      The Roman Gladius is about 60cm overall length.
      Which would be around the length of a Wakizashi, or a machete.
      So it behaves closer to what we would call a "short sword" than regular swords.
      The swords used in early Spring Autumn period in ancient China is actually around that length.
      (looking at the Sword of Gou Jian which is 55cm long)
      ruclips.net/video/KgH-aMuuRdw/видео.html
      That is during the bronze age where the swords are predominantly bronze swords.
      When going into the Warring States period, the sword's length grew to 70+ to even
      91cm overall for the Qin swords (that is dug up with the Terracotta Army)
      That is a 91cm long bronze sword we are talking about
      The 刺客列传 or Assassin's Biography actually depicted a scene where Jing Ke with
      "the dagger hidden in a map scroll" actually caught the Qin King by surprise in an attempted assassination.
      The Qin king need to be reminded to draw his sword from the back before taking out the assassin on his own.
      Which kept scholars baffled for over 2000 years as swords of the period were thought to be short swords in 50 - 60 cm in length
      until a 91cm long Qin sword is being excavated
      4m 27s - documentary footage of excavation.
      ruclips.net/video/SvXRczu8tOk/видео.html
      28m 22s The assassination scene (in a historical drama)
      ruclips.net/video/ct543N0l6tQ/видео.html
      I am not too sure if the average people would be familiar with those lengths.
      55-60cm is about the length of your elbow, which means it is possible to hide a short sword
      between the shield and the arm holding it, you wouldn't be obstructed by the scabbard,
      Or if you hold it in reverse grip (ice pick grip) the blade would be just about the length of your forearm.
      A round shield would usually be sufficient to cover the forearm up to the elbow, usually up to the shoulder
      Also if you have any experience with swords you might find that shorter swords are quicker to draw.
      (usually means you have less arm displacement away from you)
      The thing is a 91cm sword which I mostly mean actually has the blade length nearing a Katana.
      Which average people might find it difficult to draw from the hip especially when your other hand is holding a shield.
      This means you will need extra clearance when drawing the sword, something which in formation can be difficult or annoying
      when your scabbard struck the knees of your teammates.
      Not only will you need to watch out of the extended draw length, the pommel will hit your fellow soldier on your right hand side or right in front of you
      if you gotten too close within the formation.

    • @jay_chang
      @jay_chang 3 года назад

      @@jacquesstrapp3219
      I started the paragraph with
      "Actually in ancient China..."
      I did not mentioned Roman.
      And those were explanation why swords didn't become a mainstream weapons in formation IN ANCIENT CHINA.
      Saying short swords are swords is as good as saying.
      "Wakizashi are katana"
      I don't know if you really understand certain terminology are used to describe certain specification of weapons.
      The Chinese jian (sword) has more or less been in the 90cm to 100cm length that is around "3 feet" for the past 2200+ years.
      Sword 剑 (Jian) is usually refered to the 90+ cm
      (Over 3 feet)
      Similar to Katana referring to "Daito"
      Short sword 短剑 (duan jian) is referring to the
      60-80 cm range (under 3 feet)
      Wakizashi, kodachi, chisa katana (small sword)
      In Japanese context
      Dagger 匕首 (bi shou) is the 1 feet+
      30-40cm range, or it could be shorter.
      Tanto in Japanese context.

    • @jay_chang
      @jay_chang 3 года назад

      @@jacquesstrapp3219
      Did I not read it wrongly ?
      You are asking a Chinese ethnic if English
      is their second language ?
      Actually English is "on the books" my first language for compulsory education, but in terms of proficiency it is considered a second language as my mother tongue is Chinese language.
      It could be translation and misunderstanding of the terms.
      And the differences between languages leading to lost in translation.
      I should have actually used "Jian" 剑 to be specific, instead of leaving the term in the bracket at the beginning of the comment.
      So for most of the original post the "sword" that I am referring to is
      "Straight-bladed double-edged Chinese Jian"
      For single edged straight or curved bladed
      weapons it is actually referring to "knife" or "saber" depending on the length.
      Both uses the term "Dao" 刀 in Chinese
      Katana かたな has the kanji of "刀"
      Which is the same as "dao" in Chinese
      This is more of a habit of thinking in Chinese terminology and writing directly into English. Especially when writing about Chinese terminology.
      As the English dictionary definition of "sword" is a relatively vague term which a Katana
      (That has a classification as "saber/ Dao" under Chinese language) could be refered to as "Japanese sword"
      In Chinese translation a Katana is refered to
      "日本刀" which has the same pronunciation as "Nihonto"
      And roughly translate to "Japanese saber"
      The Roman gladius is translated to
      "罗马短剑" literally meaning
      "Roman short sword"

  • @digbywhite5640
    @digbywhite5640 3 года назад

    What type of one-handed sort is that where did you get it?

  • @snider029
    @snider029 3 года назад +8

    Swords are also versatile. Can use it as a spear or a hammer if you hold it right.

  • @cadethumann8605
    @cadethumann8605 3 года назад +1

    Well, a sword could make for a decent improvisation of a blunt force weapon if you strike with the hilt (either by holding by the blade or simply when in extreme close range). Still, there are better weapons for dedicated blunt force.

  • @donna30044
    @donna30044 3 года назад +48

    This is a comment to feed the algorithm. 🙂

  • @mortenovergaard7397
    @mortenovergaard7397 3 года назад

    excellent video. good job

  • @ecthelionalfa
    @ecthelionalfa 3 года назад

    Matt question, what is your opinion on regenyei swords? i want to buy one and would like opinions, also if someone know about them plz fell free to tell

  • @alexeysaphonov232
    @alexeysaphonov232 3 года назад

    Interesting point, which brings HEMA somehow closer, than I expected to the Olympic fencing. At least in causes. In both case it is a play: in olympic fencing it's focusing on speed, in HEMA on authentic look. (Sure oversimplification)

  • @killerkraut9179
    @killerkraut9179 3 года назад

    What is with the Murderstroke (Mordschlag , Donnerschlag)?

  • @penitentialarts
    @penitentialarts 3 года назад

    What is that curved sword on the right-hand side of the screen, to the left of the axe? Who makes it?

  • @althesmith
    @althesmith 3 года назад

    In his book on cavalry, General de Brack said flatly a poorly sharpened sabre was worse than a wooden club in combat.

  • @gammamaster1894
    @gammamaster1894 3 года назад

    Hello Matt, what longsword would you recommend against home invaders? I was thinking an Albion Principe would make a good example. Thanks 👍

    • @GothamClive
      @GothamClive 3 года назад

      Depends on the size of your home. You need a lot of space for a longsword.

    • @sebastianriemer1777
      @sebastianriemer1777 3 года назад

      A langmesser maybe. Another name for it was Hauswehr or Bauernwehr, literally house defender. It's like a mix of a long bowy knife and a short sword.

  • @corro202
    @corro202 3 года назад

    Great video.

  • @stephend50
    @stephend50 3 года назад

    Inertia is resistance to change in its state of motion. Momentum is the tendency to remain in motion. I overcome the axe's inertia so I can swing it and it's momentum is the force with which it strikes

  • @lukewilliams8548
    @lukewilliams8548 3 года назад +1

    I don't intend to disagree, but to add.
    One tool shouldn't be used for every application. People and intended use vary. To meet a variety of applications, you need a variety of trade offs. Some applications benefit from a tool that sacrifices cutting power for being nimble. In other applications, cutting power is relatively more important than being nimble. Some applications benefit from being shorter for being carried on your body. Other applications don't require the tool to be carried on your body and can just be held.
    I guess you could make a video about the advantages and disadvantages of poll arms and how they're not as nimble as swords. "Pole Arms are HEAVY advantages and disadvantages of Pole Arms" or something.
    Edit: I realized that heavy usually refers to the overall weight, but to me it more often means how much force it takes to lift and use it. Where something is held relative to the point of balance affects how much force you have to exert to lift and use it. Because of this, the overall weight of an object is not always how "heavy" it is. Perhaps it should say "SLOW" instead, but that word can be applied differently similarly to the word "heavy" but the same applies to "weak" so whatever.
    Speaking of which, people say "the rapier is not light" or "the rapier is light", either statement can be true or false depending on the intended meaning of light. I have found that those who say "it's light" refer to the force needed to lift and use it compared to other swords, and that the people who say "it's not light" want to clarify that while it requires relatively less force to pick up and use, its overall weight is not relatively less.

    • @lunacorvus3585
      @lunacorvus3585 3 года назад +2

      He is talking specifically about the ‘percussion force that can be generated by a swing with a sword’, not the overall effectiveness of sword as a weapon. Also, as a long time subscriber, I am pretty sure he had mentioned multiple times about the disadvantages of polearms in his videos. He had several videos before that focus on polearms, check that out if that interest you.

    • @lukewilliams8548
      @lukewilliams8548 3 года назад +1

      @@lunacorvus3585 thanks. I guess I said "cutting power" instead of "percussion force that can be generated by a swing", it didn't occur to me that they weren't the same thing because "cutting power" has additional factors such as edge geometry. I believe that accurate terminology is important and people should help each other out with that. I'll check out his videos about pole Arms.

  • @MoeMoeJoeJoe
    @MoeMoeJoeJoe 3 года назад +2

    6:25 "It's about 18 inches from the tip. Sorry for using Imperial there, it's what I'm used to."
    As an America I appreciate you using Imperial because I don't have to do any conversions, but I still gotta ask; how is it that you, an Englishman, are used to using Imperial over Metric in any capacity?? Like, for real, I am VERY curious.

    • @jm9371
      @jm9371 3 года назад +3

      Remember, Imperial was originally a British standard. I live in Canada, we use primarily metric because it makes the most sense (all base 10). However, we also understand Imperial as we have British roots and are US trade partners. I think British Motorways use MPH for speed limits still and most UK boomers are pre-metric conversion, so they understand both formats.

    • @MoeMoeJoeJoe
      @MoeMoeJoeJoe 3 года назад

      @@jm9371 I knew that Imperial was the British standard, they did make it, but I guess I just assumed it had been out of use much long than it was.

    • @joshuapeckham2453
      @joshuapeckham2453 3 года назад +1

      @@MoeMoeJoeJoe no, it's in common parlance. Everybody is a bit different.
      I measure all weights exclusively in kilograms.
      I describe short distances in inches and feet, very small distances in millimetres, walking distances in metres/km (due to Army training) and driving distances in miles (due to road signs)!
      Food energy is definitely calories.
      Volume is litres, unless it's beer in which case it's pints (568ml).
      Temperature is always Celsius.
      Anything else is used in a scientific context and is 100% metric

    • @MoeMoeJoeJoe
      @MoeMoeJoeJoe 3 года назад

      @@joshuapeckham2453 I see, thank you for the insight.

  • @tl8211
    @tl8211 3 года назад +1

    The energy of a weapon increases with the square of the distance from its mass to the fixed point (your hands). So a pole weapon will have dramatically more energy. For example, an axe should have more than 5 times the rotational inertia of a similarly weighted cutting sword (assuming the axe has 75% of the length and balances around 75% of its length, while the sword balances around 25% of its length), and thus since a person can strike with similar speed with both, the axe can have 5 times the energy right there. A quarterstaff will have similar or even more energy, and it's no surprise even a blunt hit not to the head can kill when it's dealing several times the energy.

    • @internetsurferxxx2678
      @internetsurferxxx2678 3 года назад

      what speeds though?

    • @TheChiconspiracy
      @TheChiconspiracy 3 года назад

      Just just distance, remember that a thin sword blade loses a LOT more energy since it flexes considerably more than a stout wooden haft.

  • @junichiroyamashita
    @junichiroyamashita 3 года назад

    Japanese used a type of sword shaped blunt weapon,called Tekkan or Tetto.

  • @buffewo6386
    @buffewo6386 3 года назад +3

    Range is key!!
    The goal is to kill your target before they kill you back...

  • @Psiberzerker
    @Psiberzerker 3 года назад +2

    With the exception of the ones that are large enough to be practically pole-arms (Those Warhammer Tucks come to mind) they're designed to look nice, and elegant, not to mention being comfortable to carry, too. You can't have all of that and Raw Power. Everything that's stronger than a good sword (Skilled>Build) is a bitch to live with. That goes double for large Shields.

    • @Psiberzerker
      @Psiberzerker 3 года назад +1

      The lunge is also a lot of Reach, the most you can get out of a given weapon. There's just longer weapons than swords, spears for example, and you can lunge with those 2 handed. The spear is still going to hit harder, because it's a heavier weapon.

  • @DontKeeptheFaith
    @DontKeeptheFaith 3 года назад +1

    At 0:02, a groups of rowdy, drunken swords turn around slowly and ask, "What'd ee say?"

  • @futurerandomness1620
    @futurerandomness1620 3 года назад +2

    So going by the polearm analogy, I guess it wouldn't be safe to execute a mordhau hit in HEMA practice? In practicality that pretty much turns the sword into a mace or crows beak, probably not too safe.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax 3 года назад +2

      avoid that, yes, unless it's padded and you're careful.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 3 года назад +1

      Yeah. I know of at least one case where someone got a concussion that left a permanent injury and resulted in a lawsuit from using that technique.
      Unlike the sharp edge, mordhau with blunts are pretty similar between 'real' and practice swords-that to say, about the same level of dangerous and injurious, since the mechanics are pretty much identical.

    • @TheChiconspiracy
      @TheChiconspiracy 3 года назад +1

      It turns them into a really shitty mace or crows beak, but yeah they're more dangerous that way.

  • @jacktomas1596
    @jacktomas1596 3 года назад +1

    Like with everything depends on the scenario. If I was in an army fighting on an open field yeah I'm probably gonna want a pole arm. If I'm fighting one to one I'm probably going to want something like a sword.