In hindsight I realize I neglected to comment much on Tod's work itself, as I was just focused on the practical aspects of those historical designs. Regardless of whatever they were thinking back then, his craftsmanship here and now is outstanding. That's why he has earned the right to harshly criticize some features of historical originals... see Matt's video on that. :) ruclips.net/video/vD7HmlZqdDM/видео.html
The sword with the hammer on the end isa tournament weapon. The rule was that a piece of metal had to be attached to the tip of the sword as a break stop to prevent it from peing able to run the opponent through. Some clever guy has bent the rules by attaching a hammer head as the break stop. German officers still played this type of tournament in the early 20th century, which is why many of them had facial scars and missing eyes.
Tod's work is so phenomenal... That it isn't a "made by the guy standing next to you" kind of thing. It IS a piece plucked out of history, as if by time travel. The strange "judicial duel hammer" thing... There was no discussion of "is this hook in the same place as the original" when discussing it's function. "Todd may not have put it in the right place" wasn't a possible answer. it is accepted to be accurate of the original. Tod's work is so clean, and so true, that his work is beyond reproach. His work is casually accepted seamlessly as "the original". It isn't a reproduction anymore. To the mind, It's 100% the real deal. By not commenting on his craftsmanship... You have given him very high praise indeed. Accidental praise is the most genuine. And I think he knows that.
yeah, it's the sort of view I wish Tod and Matt had done previously when the weapons first came out, but I suspect they might not have the same options in terms of cameras-that-don't-have-arrows-through-them, which is all good. Amazing work Tod does, even on things like his trebuchet, which you'd expect some rougher joinery on.
Judicial Duel were all about even odds, so givng the opponents unusual or even weird weapons would help to ensure that no one had an advantage from being used to it.
More than just "won't have used before" I see it more like "this is an objectively bad design in critical ways that makes it behave unintuitively, so it's not possible for you to have used it before nor for you to be used to anything comparable"
About the very long rondel dagger: I'm an art student and very good friends with an historian and an engineer. I also happen to be a HEMA instructor and we've been doing an academic research about these long stabbing daggers that are essentially short sword length. In Italy we have a few southern italian sources which talk about and showcase such weapons. The neapolitan infantrymen in the battle of Otranto (1460) are shown carrying these short estoques/long daggers. After a bit more research we came up with the sources talking about southern italian infantrymwn carrying "stocchi/ mezzi stocchi/ daghette" (short tucks) as secondary weapons that could be more serviceable for their manner of doing war (3 infantrymen attack one guy, the familiar comes in with one of these or a woodsplitting axe and finishes them off). I won't cite the entire research because it's very vast and we're planning on publishing it as a book, but we found that extremely long stabbing daggers or short swords are rather common as weapons for southern italian foot soldiers since the age of Federico II up until the half of the XVI century. It's a regional specialty, and we found specimens with three-lobed guards (almost like a tri-bollock tuck) and fishtail pommels both in iconography and as physical specimens. Baselards were also common, often in the place of swords even, as it's been understood from a research in the church of S. Lorenzo Maggiore, Naples. The Kingdoms of Naples and Sicily were still very fixated on the manner of late roman legions in warfare, it seems, favoring short, stabbing tucks for taking down enemies in groups. It's an intresting topic of research, might be worth looking into because southern italian medieval weaponry is very peculiar.
Regarding the research I talked about... it still isn't complete. Still, when it will be (with its own bibliography and an official publication) it would be quite the honor and, I believe, a pleasure to be able to discuss the topic of southern Italian weaponry and, in particular, the phenomenon of long, tuck-like daggers as commonplace weapons in history. I'm just saying this to let you know that me and my collaborators are open to the idea of a collaboration (sorry for the wordplay here) for the sake of knowledge. For this possibility, how will we be able to contact you for an exchange? I think academic studies on this topic are lacking, especially in our southern Italian region... there is much, much more than it seems. Just a little spoiler: there has been a political and military relationship with the Kingdom of Naples and the dynasty of Vlad Tepes of Wallachia, to the point that we found evidence of various elements of central-European Holy Roman Empire culture in the church complexes and tombs of southern Italian and Neapolitan knights.
I think you just sold three copy of that book, one each to Skal, Tod and Matt; Also, you've just raised an extremely interesting possibility they may not have accounted for: _travel._ Possibly the Roundel XXL wasn't native made but carried by a traveler: _or_ that a traveler who'd seen them abroad asked their friendly local weaponsmith to make one from description.
@@5peciesunkn0wn not yet... but we are thinking of calling it "Study on the stylistic incidences of the Parthenopean hoplology from the XIV to the XVII century"
@@ShadowDragon8685 that's possible too... once we publish the book it'll be clearer for anyone i hope... btw no, i haven't sold any copies yet, it's still in the making
Loved this video and we as a community actually need more of them. Blade users talking with blde makers to better understand the materials and actual implementation of things. Not just wierdly odd weapons but even standard ones. Love it! Thanks gents!
The oversized dagger I get the impression that (based on their observations) it was made for someone wanting the START trouble against law-abiding people just carrying regular knives and daggers, and still being able to skirt the law when not causing trouble. “Once you have it out, it has advantages over someone with a smaller blade” is what got me thinking this.
@@queenannsrevenge100 maybe it was a "cocodrile dandee" situation and u just have to show that thing for the oponents to back out of figthing you and leave
There were plenty of folding-shaft Italian spetums in the 16th century: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spetum commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Spetum_(folding),_Italy,_c._1550_-_Higgins_Armory_Museum_-_DSC05683.JPG I'm convinced the flick spear replica made by Tod was based on a very similar polearm.
@@ZemplinTemplar There are some things I do notice all the surviving foldable ones seem to be highly decorated. This might be survivor bias you only keep the good looking ones. But there are also examples of versions that do not fold and those tend to be a lot less decorated. So might it be that they used the more plain version in general use, and that the crate of fancy folded ones was brought out when they needed to make some dramatic entrance ?
I can certainly guess the fascinating off camera conversations that must go on between you three. Especially in regards to the stupid laws on arms and armour we have
Schola, Skalla, and Tod, the three horsemen! (Unintentional pun here: "Todd" is a word for "Death" in German, which just conjures to mind a the funny scene of "the four horsemen: Krieg, Pest, Hungern.... and *Todd...* )
Really nice to see you working with Matt and Tod....also weird weapons for the win. Hope you had a good time and if possible.....more collabs in the future?
Dequitem had an interesting conclusion after fighting with hussite flail for several hours in full plate armor. It's easier for non-trained guy to score a hit because it moves unpredictably. But it's harder to control the weapon precisely for the same reason.
The other advantage of the flail shown here is that it's literally a converted farming tool, similar to Okinawan weapons. The Hussites were mostly farmers, followers of Czech preacher Jan Hus.
@@DalHrusk all flails are THE EASIEST weapons to land hits with. And it’s actually hard to really damage yourself. You’d have to be a total coordination-less goof or you’d need to be showing off etc
@@DalHrusk imagine just a chain. Easy to land a hit with? So damn easy, right? The whip and flail as nearly limitless skill-cap but the learning curve is a flat line.
I can definitely imagine the armorer who was visited by the "good idea fairy" trying to hawk a blingy flick spear. Or the journeyman presenting the piece to his guild: "yeah it's probably not practical, but look how COOL and well made it is".
The Journeyman's old master dragging himself back into the guildhall after a tavern-crawl "Add a Greek Fire Siphon to it." before collapsing into a puddle of vomit.
That's what I'm thinking of the bike-chain flail as well. Probably requires a more skilled craftsman (or just more time/material) to make than a regular chain, and thus is more expensive and used as a status symbol. Like a medieval iPhone.
weirdly, flick-opening spears show up in some other places - yesterday I found a *Confederate American* version of this, albeit being much simpler - a flick-opening pike. The good idea fairy strikes many!
"Or the journeyman presenting the piece to his guild: "yeah it's probably not practical, but look how COOL and well made it is"" as a masterpiece, in the sense of "the piece you present to be accepted as a master"
@@ulrichkalber9039 Exactly, it's all about knowing your audience. Surely not every masterpiece changed the world, they would just have to prove that you can work to some high standard. That feels like it might encourage showing off over pragmatism.
Agreed. By far and away one of the most useful bucklers out there. Though you probably want to carry a normal one as well for when a sword gets stuck in that one lol
@@Skallagrim Gah, sorry!! I didn't catch his feature on your video a few years back - something for me to watch later this Saturday! Regardless, it's great to see you both in-person here in ol' Blighty. I've distinct teenage memories of your videos featuring Lee Smith vs Richard Marsden that helped light the sparks of my interest in weapons collecting, restoring and sparring. Thank you. Your videos specifically helped me extend my love of swords from displaying them, to sparring with them :)
YES!!! I'm glad you got to do this and I hope there's more to come of it. I'd love to see you sparring with Matt and testing some of Tod's stuff. Discussing more unusual historical weapons is always fun too. Hope you had a great trip!
I watched one of the videos on Matt’s site and left a similar comment: It is great to watch my three favorite HEMA you-tubers in one handy video. Good Stuff! Keep up the good work. I hope that you enjoyed your trip!
I have enjoyed all three of your channels individually. Watching the three of you together, sharing and adding to each other's ideas was just fantastic. I wish there were more collaborations like this on RUclips where nobody's egos got in the way and people just demonstrated a genuine interest in what someone else had to say. Thank you guys.
It really is a great skill that he can just see something in a museum, that doesn't exist outside of that setting, and make it himself so people can do more than just look and write about it.
14:40 A heavy, unique looking weapon that doesn't hit as hard as you'd think it would sounds perfect for a tournament. The heavy weapon means the fight slows down so the audience can see. The iron shaft could even be a safety feature where instead of poleaxing your opponent, the shaft bends if you hit them too hard.
Such a worthwhile collaboration! I’m glad you three met up to share your expertise and points of view. Easily my top three channels for historical weapons and armor.
Great vid y'all! I'm a big fan of the weird weapons series and very happy to see you getting involved in the collab Skal. I thought I might comment on the "bike chain" mace for a moment. For quite some time I have had a chainsaw flail of sorts I made by using a discarded chainsaw chain with teflon tape on one end to make a handle. It was loosely based on an anime I saw in my youth where a bike chain was wielded by a street gang type person. More recently I saw a documentary on Bruce Lee which claimed he used such a weapon in his youth as a member of a street gang. More recently I have made a second one out of a regular bike chain as an homage to Lee. Both of them can be very dangerous and often act in ways that can be hard to anticipate. Since the bike chain is more lubricated, has no bladed "teeth", and is longer it also handles completely different though in a similar fashion. With the chainsaw chain when it binds to itself it can become much more dangerous since the bound static portion will act like the ball of a morning star. One of the largest advantages I can think of in using such weapons which can only be wielded in a linear way is that if it was dropped or disarmed from the wielder it would be highly unlikely someone else could just pick it up and use it. I suppose that's one of the big advantages of being proficient with any weird weapon, lol. Thanks for the vid! It seems I have a few of these collab vids to mill through though I plan to space them out, savor the experience and will most likely either be a wallflower or very wordy as I am generally prone to being.
@ 7:40 wow i love this thinking! It seems too common that we latch onto the most intuitive reason and then mock anything that veers away from that....but there could be any number of factors that influence it that we just can't/don't think of nowadays.
that flick partisan spear follows the rule of cool. Imagine being the one nobleman in Renaissance Italy that arms his bodyguards with these. Everyone else is limited to short weapons inside a carriage, but then you come out with 4 bodyguards behind you. They all flick out their weapons and like some 16th century transformers, they suddenly are all armed with spears. They dont have to be durable. They just need to work once when needed, but nobody is going to mess with you and your army of transformer spears when everyone else is carrying shorter weapons.
I saw the other video and all I can see in your eyes is "Give me the sword"! Loved the collaboration. All three of you have different skill sets and it was amazing.
3 guys I look to for medieval weapon knowledge. I've been watching you for like 10 hrs and Matt Easton for about 5. Todd for about 2. Love these videos, do more!🤺
Legendary collab , i wished for a video like this since i saw your old videos with the crossbow that todd made. Thanks to that video i learned about Todds Workshop, i thank you for that!
I always love when we can see a RUclipsr do a video with the 'Guys-on-Top'. Just standing around talking on the same level & being able to understand each other just fine. These guys are the ones running the HEMA training studios & working with the Museums, so to see them making a video with RUclipsr like yourself that doesn't have access to all the resources they have, is in it's own way them acknowledging your own experience as well.
Awesome to see all three of you together. I think a lot of these weapons fall into the “experimental category.” Someone came up with an idea, the idea disseminates throughout the communities and eventually you have enough people copying the idea to test it, and they never catch on.
You're joking right. Do you have any idea whatsoever of the actually timelines in history in regards to weaponry? The first contact with Japan with anyone from England was roughly 1600.(William Adams) You notice that it was mentioned these "flails" (the correct name vs chain mace) were referenced in documents from the 1400's long before anyone from England could have had any contact or knowledge of anything to do with Ninjas!
@@bigcconservativeguy2534 I guess you're not familiar with the term "Mall Ninja"? That has nothing to do with ninja, it refers to people who like ninja movies, buy cheap and useless but "fancy" looking decorative "weapons" and feel like their now like those movie ninjas.
@@Glimmlampe1982 Nope you're correct. I tend to ignore, extremely irrelevant, childish and asinine things that occupy the time of sub 85 IQ troglodytes. They are not ever in any rush to enter my sphere either to make me aware of them, which is likely the only good judgement they'l ever show in life! More to the point of your comment regarding the weapon. When wielded with the required skill it can be devastatingly effective, something that would escape a great many people of this era, including you apparently, hence your reference, as there is a definite lack of the dedication required to achieve any such level of skill in virtually anything. Except perhaps vaping and beating off in Gran's basement apartment where they reside!
for the spring loaded spear, I don't think the fragility really matters at all, and I don't think it necessarily is a "show off" weapon. It clearly is NOT a battlefield weapon, it isn't going to be hitting armor, or be hit by other spears. It clearly is meant for areas where you don't want a big weapon. Like the inside of a carriage. If you're in a sleigh/carriage/etc in the middle of a cold winter with the doors closed with a guard or two, they can have one of these inside and deploy it if some bandits or whatever bother you.
Re the 1 handed flail: Those were mostly used on horseback, afaik, to reduce blowback compared to a mace. The chain version might make it easier to avoid the ball hitting your own horse when bouncing back from a downward strike. And unlike the knight, the horse usually was armored less along the sides, with mere padding instead of steel.
A “SwitchSpear” is one of those things likely developed because some noble was tired of his guards complaining about the impracticality of the storage of their pole arms or something. 😂
Oh. My. God. This is what I'm talking about. I've been dreaming about this type of collab for a while! Thank you so much for providing this much knowledge and entertainment for all of us!
In hindsight I realize I neglected to comment much on Tod's work itself, as I was just focused on the practical aspects of those historical designs. Regardless of whatever they were thinking back then, his craftsmanship here and now is outstanding. That's why he has earned the right to harshly criticize some features of historical originals... see Matt's video on that. :)
ruclips.net/video/vD7HmlZqdDM/видео.html
When i finished watching the video i was hoping to see this comment. Tod is an amazing artist and we know that you know that.
Congratz on the collaboration.
Lol, especially with all the hints Matt was dropping to do just that...
The sword with the hammer on the end isa tournament weapon. The rule was that a piece of metal had to be attached to the tip of the sword as a break stop to prevent it from peing able to run the opponent through. Some clever guy has bent the rules by attaching a hammer head as the break stop. German officers still played this type of tournament in the early 20th century, which is why many of them had facial scars and missing eyes.
Tod's work is so phenomenal... That it isn't a "made by the guy standing next to you" kind of thing. It IS a piece plucked out of history, as if by time travel. The strange "judicial duel hammer" thing... There was no discussion of "is this hook in the same place as the original" when discussing it's function. "Todd may not have put it in the right place" wasn't a possible answer. it is accepted to be accurate of the original. Tod's work is so clean, and so true, that his work is beyond reproach. His work is casually accepted seamlessly as "the original". It isn't a reproduction anymore. To the mind, It's 100% the real deal.
By not commenting on his craftsmanship... You have given him very high praise indeed. Accidental praise is the most genuine. And I think he knows that.
Enjoying Skall's POV camera of Tod's weird weapons. Really shows off the quality Tod puts into every piece, even these projects.
Yeah, his craftsmanship is fantastic.
yeah, it's the sort of view I wish Tod and Matt had done previously when the weapons first came out, but I suspect they might not have the same options in terms of cameras-that-don't-have-arrows-through-them, which is all good. Amazing work Tod does, even on things like his trebuchet, which you'd expect some rougher joinery on.
Yeah, Tod's films were great and the additional perspective is really interesting!
Judicial Duel were all about even odds, so givng the opponents unusual or even weird weapons would help to ensure that no one had an advantage from being used to it.
My thoughts too.
Give both sides a weapon they never used before
People have always been doing challenge runs even before gaming.
More than just "won't have used before" I see it more like "this is an objectively bad design in critical ways that makes it behave unintuitively, so it's not possible for you to have used it before nor for you to be used to anything comparable"
When I heard they were made in a pair, I had an absurd vision of someone trying to dual-wield those sword-hafted hammers.
@@artor9175same lol.
a collab i wasn't even hoping for! thanks! ❤🔥
Dream collab
Definitely awesome to have them meet up
The adventuring party is formed 🌟
Wait what’s that supposed to mean?
Same here
About the very long rondel dagger:
I'm an art student and very good friends with an historian and an engineer. I also happen to be a HEMA instructor and we've been doing an academic research about these long stabbing daggers that are essentially short sword length. In Italy we have a few southern italian sources which talk about and showcase such weapons. The neapolitan infantrymen in the battle of Otranto (1460) are shown carrying these short estoques/long daggers. After a bit more research we came up with the sources talking about southern italian infantrymwn carrying "stocchi/ mezzi stocchi/ daghette" (short tucks) as secondary weapons that could be more serviceable for their manner of doing war (3 infantrymen attack one guy, the familiar comes in with one of these or a woodsplitting axe and finishes them off).
I won't cite the entire research because it's very vast and we're planning on publishing it as a book, but we found that extremely long stabbing daggers or short swords are rather common as weapons for southern italian foot soldiers since the age of Federico II up until the half of the XVI century. It's a regional specialty, and we found specimens with three-lobed guards (almost like a tri-bollock tuck) and fishtail pommels both in iconography and as physical specimens. Baselards were also common, often in the place of swords even, as it's been understood from a research in the church of S. Lorenzo Maggiore, Naples. The Kingdoms of Naples and Sicily were still very fixated on the manner of late roman legions in warfare, it seems, favoring short, stabbing tucks for taking down enemies in groups.
It's an intresting topic of research, might be worth looking into because southern italian medieval weaponry is very peculiar.
Regarding the research I talked about... it still isn't complete. Still, when it will be (with its own bibliography and an official publication) it would be quite the honor and, I believe, a pleasure to be able to discuss the topic of southern Italian weaponry and, in particular, the phenomenon of long, tuck-like daggers as commonplace weapons in history. I'm just saying this to let you know that me and my collaborators are open to the idea of a collaboration (sorry for the wordplay here) for the sake of knowledge. For this possibility, how will we be able to contact you for an exchange? I think academic studies on this topic are lacking, especially in our southern Italian region... there is much, much more than it seems.
Just a little spoiler: there has been a political and military relationship with the Kingdom of Naples and the dynasty of Vlad Tepes of Wallachia, to the point that we found evidence of various elements of central-European Holy Roman Empire culture in the church complexes and tombs of southern Italian and Neapolitan knights.
I don't suppose you have a title for the publication to let us know what to look out for in the future? :D
I think you just sold three copy of that book, one each to Skal, Tod and Matt;
Also, you've just raised an extremely interesting possibility they may not have accounted for: _travel._
Possibly the Roundel XXL wasn't native made but carried by a traveler: _or_ that a traveler who'd seen them abroad asked their friendly local weaponsmith to make one from description.
@@5peciesunkn0wn not yet... but we are thinking of calling it "Study on the stylistic incidences of the Parthenopean hoplology from the XIV to the XVII century"
@@ShadowDragon8685 that's possible too... once we publish the book it'll be clearer for anyone i hope... btw no, i haven't sold any copies yet, it's still in the making
Loved this video and we as a community actually need more of them. Blade users talking with blde makers to better understand the materials and actual implementation of things. Not just wierdly odd weapons but even standard ones. Love it! Thanks gents!
That Street Fighter intro though? Chef's kiss!
Having all 3 of you together is an absolute TREAT!!!
This is what I imagine my companions in Skyrim talking about my inventory.
For real
King: "Stop carrying swords in the street! They are Dangerous battlefield weapons!"
Noble: "Ok." (Pulls out comically large dagger.)
I use my zweihander dagger for peeling apples.
@@rhetorical1488"But I only use my poledagger to gut the fish, officer"
The oversized dagger I get the impression that (based on their observations) it was made for someone wanting the START trouble against law-abiding people just carrying regular knives and daggers, and still being able to skirt the law when not causing trouble. “Once you have it out, it has advantages over someone with a smaller blade” is what got me thinking this.
@@queenannsrevenge100 maybe it was a "cocodrile dandee" situation and u just have to show that thing for the oponents to back out of figthing you and leave
@@queenannsrevenge100 it's always a cat and mouse. some people are trying hard to mug people and others are trying hard not to be mugged.
That flick spear is awesome! I can tell I’m going to love this video. Great to see you doing this collab.
I imagine that robbers seeing these suddenly appear may quickly rethink their odds.
Bloodborne trick weapon IRL.
There were plenty of folding-shaft Italian spetums in the 16th century:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spetum
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Spetum_(folding),_Italy,_c._1550_-_Higgins_Armory_Museum_-_DSC05683.JPG
I'm convinced the flick spear replica made by Tod was based on a very similar polearm.
I could see them kept inside a carriage by the door like modern fire extinguishers. Basically a backup-backup emergency weapon.
@@ZemplinTemplar
There are some things I do notice all the surviving foldable ones seem to be highly decorated.
This might be survivor bias you only keep the good looking ones.
But there are also examples of versions that do not fold and those tend to be a lot less decorated.
So might it be that they used the more plain version in general use, and that the crate of fancy folded ones was brought out when they needed to make some dramatic entrance ?
Oh damn its all of my favorite weapon history youtubers collabing! Heck yeah!
The excessively long Rondel dagger is for when you need to perform a stealth-takedown on a VERY fat guy, or two guys standing next to each other :P
Or if you’re really short and they’re tall 😂
The preferred weapon of the little-known, but universally feared, Hobbit assassin. Generally employed from behind on the up-stroke.
Or if you're isekaied to a word where ogres and monsters need to be slain
@@christopherreed4723"little-known"... I see what you did there.
Obviously they are a very small dagger for a large Atlantean! Signed/ Graham Hancock. lol.
This was such a fun day - thanks to Skall and Tod for hanging out!
@@scholagladiatoria you, @skallagrim and @tods_workshop are it. You’re literally the trinity right now of great content on this topic.
I can certainly guess the fascinating off camera conversations that must go on between you three. Especially in regards to the stupid laws on arms and armour we have
Schola, Skalla, and Tod, the three horsemen!
(Unintentional pun here: "Todd" is a word for "Death" in German, which just conjures to mind a the funny scene of "the four horsemen: Krieg, Pest, Hungern.... and *Todd...* )
This is a reminder: Silencing criticism is wrong. Unfortunately, you don't believe that as evidenced by your actions.
@@ChaosSwissroIl tf is your problem?
Nice to see all three of you together
Great video, Skall! It's so good to see you, Tod, and Matt teaming up!
Really nice to see you working with Matt and Tod....also weird weapons for the win.
Hope you had a good time and if possible.....more collabs in the future?
There will be more collabs on Matt's and Tod's channels, and I've got a couple more with Matt (lots of footage to edit, so it might take me a while).
The beauty off the long shaft flails with shorter chains is it's easier to avoid hitting yourself. Much harder to damage yourself with it.
Dequitem had an interesting conclusion after fighting with hussite flail for several hours in full plate armor. It's easier for non-trained guy to score a hit because it moves unpredictably. But it's harder to control the weapon precisely for the same reason.
The other advantage of the flail shown here is that it's literally a converted farming tool, similar to Okinawan weapons. The Hussites were mostly farmers, followers of Czech preacher Jan Hus.
@@blarfroer8066 true. And thx. But tbh they say that in the video.
@@DalHrusk all flails are THE EASIEST weapons to land hits with. And it’s actually hard to really damage yourself. You’d have to be a total coordination-less goof or you’d need to be showing off etc
@@DalHrusk imagine just a chain. Easy to land a hit with? So damn easy, right?
The whip and flail as nearly limitless skill-cap but the learning curve is a flat line.
"One of my finest works Skall, come on!!" lmao.
The pole flail it's just so stupidly simple and brutal that you can't help but love it.
Like Skall said it's a fancy "unga bunga stick". Beautiful simplicity tends to resonate with people more than fancy complexity.
I can definitely imagine the armorer who was visited by the "good idea fairy" trying to hawk a blingy flick spear.
Or the journeyman presenting the piece to his guild: "yeah it's probably not practical, but look how COOL and well made it is".
The Journeyman's old master dragging himself back into the guildhall after a tavern-crawl "Add a Greek Fire Siphon to it." before collapsing into a puddle of vomit.
That's what I'm thinking of the bike-chain flail as well. Probably requires a more skilled craftsman (or just more time/material) to make than a regular chain, and thus is more expensive and used as a status symbol. Like a medieval iPhone.
weirdly, flick-opening spears show up in some other places - yesterday I found a *Confederate American* version of this, albeit being much simpler - a flick-opening pike. The good idea fairy strikes many!
"Or the journeyman presenting the piece to his guild: "yeah it's probably not practical, but look how COOL and well made it is""
as a masterpiece, in the sense of "the piece you present to be accepted as a master"
@@ulrichkalber9039 Exactly, it's all about knowing your audience. Surely not every masterpiece changed the world, they would just have to prove that you can work to some high standard. That feels like it might encourage showing off over pragmatism.
Great collaboration and I got to see some pieces that I was totally unaware of! Thanks to all 3 of you!
That little buckler is one of my favourite things featured on Tod's channel. If he sold them, I'd buy one.
He takes commissions. Based on his other work, you'd be looking at about 1-2 grand. Likely about 1300$ USD.
the konami code buckler
Agreed. By far and away one of the most useful bucklers out there. Though you probably want to carry a normal one as well for when a sword gets stuck in that one lol
yessir!! never imagined you'd collab with Mr Easton. Wonderful stuff to see.
Good show Skall, good show I say!
I've done collabs with him before, just not in person. :)
@@Skallagrim Gah, sorry!! I didn't catch his feature on your video a few years back - something for me to watch later this Saturday!
Regardless, it's great to see you both in-person here in ol' Blighty.
I've distinct teenage memories of your videos featuring Lee Smith vs Richard Marsden that helped light the sparks of my interest in weapons collecting, restoring and sparring. Thank you.
Your videos specifically helped me extend my love of swords from displaying them, to sparring with them :)
Amazing collab from the best of the big sword channels here on RUclips. I hope to see more.
YES!!! I'm glad you got to do this and I hope there's more to come of it. I'd love to see you sparring with Matt and testing some of Tod's stuff. Discussing more unusual historical weapons is always fun too. Hope you had a great trip!
I sure did. :)
3 of my favorites in one video 🎉
Thank you 🙏🏻
The Triangle of blunt and edged Culture. What a pleasant collab.
best medieval weaponry trio
One of my Fav Colab's this year,, Thanks Guys
I watched one of the videos on Matt’s site and left a similar comment: It is great to watch my three favorite HEMA you-tubers in one handy video. Good Stuff! Keep up the good work. I hope that you enjoyed your trip!
I have enjoyed all three of your channels individually. Watching the three of you together, sharing and adding to each other's ideas was just fantastic. I wish there were more collaborations like this on RUclips where nobody's egos got in the way and people just demonstrated a genuine interest in what someone else had to say. Thank you guys.
Very impressive craftsmanship by Tod.
It really is a great skill that he can just see something in a museum, that doesn't exist outside of that setting, and make it himself so people can do more than just look and write about it.
14:40 A heavy, unique looking weapon that doesn't hit as hard as you'd think it would sounds perfect for a tournament. The heavy weapon means the fight slows down so the audience can see. The iron shaft could even be a safety feature where instead of poleaxing your opponent, the shaft bends if you hit them too hard.
This is the kind of content I can watch easily. A bit of history, a a couple weapons, 5-8 minutes per item.
26:00 Weird Weapons of History are as much a showcase of Technical Skills and Craftsmanship as much as Experimentations in Practicality.
THIS is the collaboration we have been waiting for!
Such a worthwhile collaboration! I’m glad you three met up to share your expertise and points of view. Easily my top three channels for historical weapons and armor.
So awesome that you were able to go visit and collab with those guys, amazing!
7:04 I've never realized how well-known Crocodile Dundee probably is
The "knoife scene" is probably more popular than the movie itself 😄
@@reptiloidmitglied2930 Not probably. DEFINETLY.
@@reptiloidmitglied2930That’s not a collaboration-video - THIS is a collaboration-video… 😁
Glad to see you three ganging up!
Great vid y'all! I'm a big fan of the weird weapons series and very happy to see you getting involved in the collab Skal. I thought I might comment on the "bike chain" mace for a moment. For quite some time I have had a chainsaw flail of sorts I made by using a discarded chainsaw chain with teflon tape on one end to make a handle. It was loosely based on an anime I saw in my youth where a bike chain was wielded by a street gang type person. More recently I saw a documentary on Bruce Lee which claimed he used such a weapon in his youth as a member of a street gang. More recently I have made a second one out of a regular bike chain as an homage to Lee. Both of them can be very dangerous and often act in ways that can be hard to anticipate. Since the bike chain is more lubricated, has no bladed "teeth", and is longer it also handles completely different though in a similar fashion. With the chainsaw chain when it binds to itself it can become much more dangerous since the bound static portion will act like the ball of a morning star. One of the largest advantages I can think of in using such weapons which can only be wielded in a linear way is that if it was dropped or disarmed from the wielder it would be highly unlikely someone else could just pick it up and use it. I suppose that's one of the big advantages of being proficient with any weird weapon, lol. Thanks for the vid! It seems I have a few of these collab vids to mill through though I plan to space them out, savor the experience and will most likely either be a wallflower or very wordy as I am generally prone to being.
This one sparks joy
A dream collaboration come true! Fascinating showcase indeed. Cheers!
Great seeing you all together. All my favorite weapons guys having a good time.
I’m so thrilled you all got together!!
This is AMAZING :D What a wonderful surprise!
@ 7:40 wow i love this thinking! It seems too common that we latch onto the most intuitive reason and then mock anything that veers away from that....but there could be any number of factors that influence it that we just can't/don't think of nowadays.
I'm working on a modern version of the 'flick spear' and trying to figure out a pollaxe version too. Great to see the 3 of you together. Thanks!
Really good seeing your take on these, it was great seeing Tod surprise Matt with them in his videos.
that flick partisan spear follows the rule of cool. Imagine being the one nobleman in Renaissance Italy that arms his bodyguards with these. Everyone else is limited to short weapons inside a carriage, but then you come out with 4 bodyguards behind you. They all flick out their weapons and like some 16th century transformers, they suddenly are all armed with spears.
They dont have to be durable. They just need to work once when needed, but nobody is going to mess with you and your army of transformer spears when everyone else is carrying shorter weapons.
Yeah if I was facing that as you describe, I wouldn't want to bet on calculations of the long term durability of my enemy's surprise spears
Like, you know how intimidating flicking out an extending baton can be? Imagine that but it’s multiple guards extending their spears at the same time.
Three great channels in a Collab, Christmas comes early this year.
Thank you very much guys 😊👍🏻
I saw the other video and all I can see in your eyes is "Give me the sword"! Loved the collaboration. All three of you have different skill sets and it was amazing.
3 guys I look to for medieval weapon knowledge. I've been watching you for like 10 hrs and Matt Easton for about 5. Todd for about 2. Love these videos, do more!🤺
Love the intro! 😂 And glad to see three of my favorite RUclipsrs in one video. 😃 Need to go back and finish the one on Matt’s from yesterday.
Very cool collab between 3 of my favorite historical weapon guys!
The crossover we desperately waited for!
As a long time fan, I have waited years for this collab! Hopefully this is just the start of something bigger!
Collab for the ages. Just great.
So neat to see the 3 of you together. On to the others channels for the rest of the story.
What a f*n Collab, ahh man: 2-3 times a year on RUclips, we are blessed with great interviews or videos, this is one.
Legendary collab , i wished for a video like this since i saw your old videos with the crossbow that todd made. Thanks to that video i learned about Todds Workshop, i thank you for that!
This was a delight to watch, glad to see you guys together :)
Oh mine, what a treat for a pleasant evening, seeing these three gentlemen discussing matters of historical weirdness.
3 dudes who we feel we know like friends. Very cool👍👍
DANG! What a collab!
I always love when we can see a RUclipsr do a video with the 'Guys-on-Top'. Just standing around talking on the same level & being able to understand each other just fine.
These guys are the ones running the HEMA training studios & working with the Museums, so to see them making a video with RUclipsr like yourself that doesn't have access to all the resources they have, is in it's own way them acknowledging your own experience as well.
That shield is wild! :) It's amazing to see the collab with Tod and Matt.
That shield is interesting but I think I'd rather have the Chinese hook shield in my off-hand. Any shield is good, of course.
How exciting. And yes, those were fascinating. Good work too.
This trio is golden.
Awesome! A great collaboration showcasing some fascinating historical weirdness. Loved it!
Awesome to see all three of you together. I think a lot of these weapons fall into the “experimental category.” Someone came up with an idea, the idea disseminates throughout the communities and eventually you have enough people copying the idea to test it, and they never catch on.
The chain mace is basically the Renaissance version of a mall ninja weapon😂
You're joking right. Do you have any idea whatsoever of the actually timelines in history in regards to weaponry? The first contact with Japan with anyone from England was roughly 1600.(William Adams) You notice that it was mentioned these "flails" (the correct name vs chain mace) were referenced in documents from the 1400's long before anyone from England could have had any contact or knowledge of anything to do with Ninjas!
@@bigcconservativeguy2534 I guess you're not familiar with the term "Mall Ninja"?
That has nothing to do with ninja, it refers to people who like ninja movies, buy cheap and useless but "fancy" looking decorative "weapons" and feel like their now like those movie ninjas.
@@Glimmlampe1982 Nope you're correct. I tend to ignore, extremely irrelevant, childish and asinine things that occupy the time of sub 85 IQ troglodytes. They are not ever in any rush to enter my sphere either to make me aware of them, which is likely the only good judgement they'l ever show in life! More to the point of your comment regarding the weapon. When wielded with the required skill it can be devastatingly effective, something that would escape a great many people of this era, including you apparently, hence your reference, as there is a definite lack of the dedication required to achieve any such level of skill in virtually anything. Except perhaps vaping and beating off in Gran's basement apartment where they reside!
The golden collab of HEMA RUclipsrs!
for the spring loaded spear, I don't think the fragility really matters at all, and I don't think it necessarily is a "show off" weapon. It clearly is NOT a battlefield weapon, it isn't going to be hitting armor, or be hit by other spears. It clearly is meant for areas where you don't want a big weapon. Like the inside of a carriage. If you're in a sleigh/carriage/etc in the middle of a cold winter with the doors closed with a guard or two, they can have one of these inside and deploy it if some bandits or whatever bother you.
Someone rich enough to afford them could probably afford to repair them, also.
3 of my favorite yt comfort people in a collab. can´t be a bad day! thanks guys...
That little hand cam thingy is awesome. TY
It brings me great joy seeing you guys together nerding about these strange things 😁
WTF just happened! Great to see great men together!
Outstanding chat! Three of my favorite channels collaborating.
Whatca surprise collab. Hopefully not the last one. 🤩
No way! This collaboration is amazing
The Triumvirate of Steel has assembled.
Re the 1 handed flail:
Those were mostly used on horseback, afaik, to reduce blowback compared to a mace.
The chain version might make it easier to avoid the ball hitting your own horse when bouncing back from a downward strike.
And unlike the knight, the horse usually was armored less along the sides, with mere padding instead of steel.
This is the colab I did not know I needed.
The colab I know I needed, but thought it would never happen.^^
Great collaboration. My hussite heart always warms up seeing a flail.
Omg this is the best thing to see in my feed after a rough past few days!
Great Video!!
What a epic Collab !!!
Weird weapons are often like off-meta cards in a tcg: effective counters to specific strategies but generally less effective
Love this. I hope in the future it gets to happen again. Wonderful.
that was a wonderful experience.
The collaboration I've been waiting for !!!
A “SwitchSpear” is one of those things likely developed because some noble was tired of his guards complaining about the impracticality of the storage of their pole arms or something. 😂
my 3 fav youtubers Amazing collab
Oh. My. God. This is what I'm talking about. I've been dreaming about this type of collab for a while!
Thank you so much for providing this much knowledge and entertainment for all of us!
So glad that you got to have these amazing collaboration!
Finally, another upload from you!
Great collab! Glad you got over to England
been waiting for this one, love the collabs!
Good to see Skall and Todd together. Need more of this
I love seeing Todd's work. It's not just the craftsmanship, it's also the research he does to try to get it accurate.