The Craziest British Officer chose this SWORD?

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
  • I specifically collect unusual British officer's swords, but this is absolutely one of the craziest I have ever got my hands on.
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Комментарии • 393

  • @brookechang4942
    @brookechang4942 Год назад +304

    "Craziest British officer" instantly means Mad Jack Churchill.

    • @Specter_1125
      @Specter_1125 Год назад +38

      Hey, Adrian Carton de Wiart was also absolutely mad.

    • @TheStonehammerFiles
      @TheStonehammerFiles Год назад +17

      Second world war and he used a claymore and long bow.

    • @bladedth3sis
      @bladedth3sis Год назад +2

      I knew before even clicking on the video. That's one of my *favorite* stories to tell people about WWII

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Год назад +3

      In a german Arms magazine, i am german and Brittas boyfriend, an italian officer of wwll was noted, who was a low rank nobility and in wwll an anachronism. He was a brave an unusual man, but His loyality was Not for Mussolini, but for official head of state, the italian king. About this man, forgotten His Name, is rarely written.

    • @joemurphy1189
      @joemurphy1189 Год назад +2

      @@brittakriep2938Amadeo Guillet by any chance?

  • @rubyshine4930
    @rubyshine4930 Год назад +93

    It's not ugly, it's beautiful and I love it.

  • @bradm.c.9569
    @bradm.c.9569 Год назад +13

    If in the 1880s they debated this topic through 'letters to the editor' in newspapers, then we should carry on the tradition through RUclips comments...

  • @outsideiskrrtinsideihurt699
    @outsideiskrrtinsideihurt699 Год назад +222

    For a sec I thought you acquired Churchill’s actual sword

    • @draven86
      @draven86 Год назад +36

      Mad Jack Churchill i pressume?

    • @roykliffen9674
      @roykliffen9674 Год назад +6

      Same here

    • @aceriverpirate9795
      @aceriverpirate9795 Год назад +11

      I think he got everyone with that title and the picture.

    • @chrisball3778
      @chrisball3778 Год назад +23

      I think he was trolling us a little. Jack Churchill was only born in 1906, and I'm not aware of any branch of the military admitting babies... so it's possible that the owner of this sword was still the maddest British officer at the time the sword was made!

    • @juandemarko8348
      @juandemarko8348 Год назад

      Same

  • @KalteGeist
    @KalteGeist Год назад +178

    Ah, "Dedicated thruster," my old college nickname.

    • @JasonWickham-k2z
      @JasonWickham-k2z Год назад

      Don't forget "Massive fingerings". I had to giggle a little when he said that. My inner 12-year-old would not be denied. 😀

    • @seanpoore2428
      @seanpoore2428 Год назад +2

      Must've been a big hit on the fencing team

    • @NikeaTiber
      @NikeaTiber Год назад +6

      Despite being heterosexual and not named ben, mine was "Bengay" because of the tagline - _"8 hours of penetrating heat"_
      :X

    • @michaelpalmer8098
      @michaelpalmer8098 Год назад +2

      Touché,

    • @watch7966
      @watch7966 11 месяцев назад +2

      You guys had duels in college?

  • @barnettmcgowan8978
    @barnettmcgowan8978 Год назад +97

    I want to hear more about these "Sword Scandals".

    • @ThundahComes
      @ThundahComes Год назад +3

      Same here. I think anyone who thinks the pipeback sword is just scandalous! 😂

    • @ThundahComes
      @ThundahComes Год назад +4

      I mean if they think it's a good sword...😂

    • @jellekastelein7316
      @jellekastelein7316 Год назад +7

      Matt has made a video about these before: ruclips.net/video/oVTKWeixSBY/видео.html

    • @barnettmcgowan8978
      @barnettmcgowan8978 Год назад

      Thanks@@jellekastelein7316

    • @sameerthakur720
      @sameerthakur720 Год назад +3

      Well there were swords which often went into scabbards meant for other swords. Then the original scabbards raised a hue-and-cry. Sometimes it led to duels between the erring sword and the sword which should've legally gone into the other scabbard. "How dare you enter my scabbard and befoul the chastity of my scabbard? "

  • @kswindl
    @kswindl Год назад +19

    It's so specific....its fun to think of how much that officer probably loved showing people his sword.

  • @artbonnar239
    @artbonnar239 Год назад +40

    Skilled officer commissioned a tool from a skilled bladesmith, to me it seams if you want a tool to do your work you get one designed by you to do your work

    • @j_taylor
      @j_taylor 11 месяцев назад +3

      If the officer knows more about swords than the swordsmith, maybe the officer should find a better swordsmith.

  • @bennettthomas4446
    @bennettthomas4446 Год назад +118

    I was expecting mad Jack's basket hilt sword too

  • @andrewrobjohns9395
    @andrewrobjohns9395 Год назад +12

    We all have different aesthetic tastes. I quite like the look of that sword, and nothing Matt said in his presentation suggested what was "mad" about it.
    In fact, all of the very good context Matt gave made it seem all the more reasonable to commission a sword like this in the early 1900's.

  • @QuentinStephens
    @QuentinStephens Год назад +20

    When I saw the title, I immediately thought of Mad Jack Churchill.

  • @Lurklen
    @Lurklen Год назад +39

    Perhaps I have bad taste, but I think it looks quite nice. It has the air of something from a sci-fi or fantasy novel, without being over the top. I quite like it.

    • @TheSaneHatter
      @TheSaneHatter Год назад +3

      Indeed: it just needs a little refinement. It's basically just a sidesword with knuckle protection, brought up to date through DIY.

  • @Ironside701
    @Ironside701 Год назад +5

    To be precise, the Colt automatic pistol was already on the market at that time. However, it was not yet as sophisticated or commercially successful as the 1911 model would become.
    Since watching your videos I have learned a lot of new things about edged weapons from different eras. Thanks! And keep it up Matt!

  • @midshipman8654
    @midshipman8654 6 месяцев назад +1

    thats a monster of a sword (in the best way possible, I love that guard, the protection kind of like a saber, but with the ability to finger the quillon like a rapier. It also looks amazing)

  • @brucesnz
    @brucesnz Год назад +4

    I love how Matt structured this video. It's like he is writing an essay and building a convincing argument for his ultimate point. Also, swords are just so cool.

  • @rogerlafrance6355
    @rogerlafrance6355 Год назад +14

    There were some at Sanhurst, Hanover, and such who took swords, horses and such, very seriously until the start of WW2. Some one needs to dig in their archives.

    • @danshakuimo
      @danshakuimo Год назад +3

      Lol in Mongolia during WW2 many Mongolians still took the horse and bow very seriously

    • @tatumergo3931
      @tatumergo3931 Год назад +1

      As someone who was in the military, I would like to say that it's not so much the tool or weapon system, but how you employ it. It depends highly on the type of battlefield environment, combat changes radically a lot between open country and urban warfare.
      Specially in urban warfare and with today's international rules of war, the possibilities for any type of weapons are endless. In the case of fighting an insurgency is even more.

    • @johnrhodes3350
      @johnrhodes3350 Год назад

      ​@@tatumergo3931image the potential usefulness of a modern compound deer hunting bow with a nasty broadhead, or crossbow for a stealth situation.

    • @tatumergo3931
      @tatumergo3931 11 месяцев назад

      @@johnrhodes3350 . I don't have to imagine it, it is a thing in some leap units. Although mostly used as a survival tool, but sometimes employed in particular operations that require it.
      Today modern suppressors have about completely covered that requirement and afford the advantage of range and volume of fire.
      On the other hand during the Panama Jungle Warfare and Survival Course, compound bows and crossbows were employed as a means of obtaining food, without making your presence in the area to be noticed. Plus there was an infinite amount of material from which to make ammunition from.
      Which reminds me of another thing. In a survival or bug out situation, a blackpowder firearm ends up being more convenient if you know the formula for making the propellant.

  • @mutantemolina3708
    @mutantemolina3708 8 месяцев назад +2

    Customized weapons will never cease to fascinate. Thanks for sharing!

  • @ironpirate8
    @ironpirate8 11 месяцев назад +5

    He definately chose the most suitable manufacturer. Well known in sword making Thurkles.

  • @simonbrooke4065
    @simonbrooke4065 Год назад +2

    My father's (second world war, artillery) officer's sword, which hung rusting in the toolshed through most of my childhood, was something like a small sword; which is to say, wire-wrapped hilt with knucklebow; rounded pommel (I think ribbed, but wouldn't swear to that). I don't recall a finger ring or a cross guard, but the shell guard was quite small, basically two identical wings. But what I do clearly recall is that the blade was extremely narrow, three edged, and essentially a pure thrusting blade. All the hilt furniture appeared to be brass.
    This MAY not have been standard issue - my father was always fairly eccentric - and was, I'm sure, primarily a dress sword. But as a data point, at least one other pure thrusting sword existed in the twentieth century British army.

  • @acethesupervillain348
    @acethesupervillain348 Год назад +2

    Also worth pointing out that there was LOTS of hand-to-hand combat in WWI, but it was done with clubs, daggers and shovels. If you try to look up things like maces, spiked clubs and flails, they are very likely to be from WW1 and not the middle ages. The reason why swords weren't popular in the trenches was because snipers figured out that people carrying swords were officers and specifically aimed for them to throw enemy units into disarray. (which was also a tactic on pirate ships and even Lord Nelson got done in that way) If it weren't for the policy of gladiuscide, trench swords probably would have come in very useful.

  • @KingTrouser
    @KingTrouser Год назад +2

    Big props to the Neil Burridge bronze special there. I trust we all wish him well in his healing journey with cancer.

  • @tranquilitybase7860
    @tranquilitybase7860 11 месяцев назад +3

    Another great video by count Dracula. His experience of swords gained over the centuries is remarkable.

  • @bogdanmariusz6384
    @bogdanmariusz6384 11 месяцев назад +2

    Cut vs thrust was solved by Polish Hussars by having two swords:
    1 - the hussar saber ("szabla husarska"): mostly for cutting, curved, on the heavy side as sabers usually go, usually equipped with a "paluch" e.g.: a thumb ring (not sure if there are any other sabers with this element!)
    2 - the "koncerz" (kind of an epee): predominantly for thrusting (depending on type, frequently ONLY for thrusting), straight and long, frequently with angled handle
    Both were the weapons of "last resort" used in melee and pursuit when the primary weapons (the lances and pistols) were exhausted.

  • @twodogsbob1786
    @twodogsbob1786 Год назад +31

    That really is the most non regulation sword I've seen you show...very cool, I assume you are keeping it? 😂

  • @AdamOwenBrowning
    @AdamOwenBrowning Год назад +1

    I've *just* finished reading the entirety of your piece titled "British Infantry Officers' Swords of the 1890s and the 1895 Infantry Sword Exercise." It was a good enough read that I went, oh, I remember that name!
    Hopped on over to your channel and here's 25 more minutes on this specific topic that you had just helped me to learn about. Lucky day. Great stuff, cheers!

  • @BreakChannelZero
    @BreakChannelZero Год назад +8

    That sword is so weird that I kinda love it.

  • @yeahnaaa292
    @yeahnaaa292 Год назад +4

    Wow. Just --- wow. Thank you, Matt. Such incredible blades. Enjoy your acquisitions.

  • @AdlerMow
    @AdlerMow Год назад +5

    "What a great sword to be thrusted with! My honor, ugh..."

  • @AliceLucindaBronte
    @AliceLucindaBronte Год назад +10

    First thought: This is going to be about Mad Jack Churchill. Second thought: This is going to be about a sword optimised for cutting. Third thought: O' totally misleading title, this is an awesome sword and not mad at all!

  • @bobmckenna5511
    @bobmckenna5511 Год назад +3

    Great presentation. Grateful to hear the word "unique" used in its correct meaning at about the 23 minute mark. That word is often diluted in its use, even by Brits. 🙂

  • @daemonharper3928
    @daemonharper3928 Год назад +5

    Great vid as usual Matt.
    A very interesting sword, the maker had their work cut out grinding those hollows...... beautiful work.
    The dude that ordered it knew his stuff, he's looked at infantry v infantry, bayonets and swords, some cavalry and lances......and he's chosen an almost perfect weapon in my opinion.
    I'm willing to bet that the Japanese despatches had officers single fighting with swords against the Russian officers, whilst the men were engaged en masse. So he's picked a long duelling sword with enough mass to parry a bayonet and get through thick winter clothing.
    What a great find.

  • @johnnivek9653
    @johnnivek9653 Год назад +15

    That's such a cool weird sword and I think I'm in love.

  • @b.h.abbott-motley2427
    @b.h.abbott-motley2427 Год назад +2

    It's nice to see that some folks continue to favor longer blades even in the early 20th century. A 39in blade would have been rather short for a rapier in the first quarter of the 17th century. That was when Girard Thibault complained about how folks wore rapiers so long that the pommel came to the armpit of the wielder if the point was placed on the ground.

  • @CDKohmy
    @CDKohmy Год назад +4

    I would've at least kept more of the regulation guard either doubling the knuckle guard for strength, or keep the entire original but add the quillon block.

  • @ElizabethMoon-n8m
    @ElizabethMoon-n8m Год назад +1

    It is gorgeously singular. Thanks for showing us all the details.

  • @wavegun
    @wavegun 11 месяцев назад +1

    Brilliant review of a brilliant design. Never anything wrong with improved power and reach.

  • @UnCivilEngineerIRL
    @UnCivilEngineerIRL Год назад +2

    Matt, if you're bored, you could press the blade into some plasticine and that'd really show the cross section. Maybe do it in 2 halves so when you put them together it would show up really well.

  • @rikremmerswaal2756
    @rikremmerswaal2756 Год назад +10

    I love that sword

  • @derskalde4973
    @derskalde4973 10 месяцев назад

    I find it so funny, how the Arrangements in the back make it look like the Zweihänder with the red handle has the head of a hatchet for a pommel.

  • @carloparisi9945
    @carloparisi9945 Год назад +3

    I totally approve of this sword! I actually tried to put together swords with a thrusting blade, a ricasso, a pommel, and a sabre guard over the years, for fencing. I just would keep the blade to 36" to make it faster to draw.

  • @Ws_minion
    @Ws_minion Год назад +31

    Best ever sword?
    Anduril, flame of the west.
    Next question.

    • @EriktheRed2023
      @EriktheRed2023 Год назад +16

      That is strictly for the younger crowd. Ringil, the sword of Fingolfin, is for the old guard.

    • @crow4936
      @crow4936 Год назад +3

      Stormbringer Elric's sword is far superior.

    • @Lurklen
      @Lurklen Год назад +3

      @@crow4936 I dunno, Anduril never killed anyone its wielder didn't want it too (including the wielder).

    • @lordkell1986
      @lordkell1986 Год назад +3

      Anglachel / Gurthang
      Tragedy in perpetuity

    • @silentandinvisible
      @silentandinvisible Год назад +2

      You take Stormbringer, I'll take Mournblade. Deal?

  • @JC-Denton
    @JC-Denton Год назад +7

    And the Craziest Matt Easton look in the preview...

    • @Llongbow52
      @Llongbow52 Год назад +2

      He's absolutely mental! Lol

  • @arnijulian6241
    @arnijulian6241 Год назад +5

    You say ''ugly'' matt but I like it!
    That man had the exact same taste as myself with a stiff blade that has ricasso & a minimal practical hilt as anything more then a knuckle bow is usually over the top..
    Even that mid rib is exactly the same as I would desire.
    This officer is very much my mood kindred!

  • @Benjanuva
    @Benjanuva Год назад +2

    That thing is awesome! Totally something I would have done. This guy rocks.

  • @m_d_c_t
    @m_d_c_t Год назад +1

    The best historical pieces are the hideous one-off weird ones. Excellent find.

  • @Knightstruth
    @Knightstruth Год назад +1

    What a cool sword! I'd have wanted one much like that myself if I were a 1900s British officer.

  • @brassbandmission1643
    @brassbandmission1643 Год назад +1

    Hope you keep this one!

  • @knightforlorn6731
    @knightforlorn6731 Год назад

    I think its very cool, beautiful even. The hand protection is such a great design.

  • @marcelomariano3586
    @marcelomariano3586 11 месяцев назад +1

    Sorry, Matt, but I think this sword is quite charming and also effective against havier blades.

  • @themyrmidon2181
    @themyrmidon2181 4 месяца назад

    I'm in love with the ugly duck.
    Now THAT is a sword worth "replicating".
    Thanks for sharing Matt

  • @FranssensM
    @FranssensM 9 месяцев назад

    That’s impressive. I picture a tall guy who really wanted to get amongst the enemy.

  • @SingularityOrbit
    @SingularityOrbit Год назад +2

    Wow, it's a 20th century tuck or estoc! Just what you'd want if somebody charged you on horseback -- apply fencing tactics, sidestep the attack and strike at the horse's heart en passant. With a blade that sturdy it just might work against a jeep, too . . . (Well, no, of course not, but I'd accept it in the spirit intended if I saw it in a movie, it's too much fun not to.)

  • @SicMetalMaggot4life
    @SicMetalMaggot4life Месяц назад

    11:22 Honestly, the same thing could be said about the German Infantry Officer’s Degen. The one I have, a pre WWI piece that lacks the Kaiser Wilhelm II sigils on the grip unusually, feels VERY blade-weighted which you’d think would be good for cutting, but the thing somehow feels too sluggish for that due to issues of leverage and balance. It can thrust for sure, but again the blade feels heavier than it needs to be to accomplish that. Very odd, almost like a re-evolution of the Spadroon in a way.

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Год назад

    Thank you as always for the good information in these videos ⚔️

  • @AWAL602
    @AWAL602 Год назад

    Matt barely holding it together while saying ‘Ultimate Thruster’ 😂

  • @minkinomics3002
    @minkinomics3002 Год назад

    I would say a lot of officers viewed melee combat as a tragic necessity. This guy had every intention of getting in a swordfight, and walking out intact.

  • @kleinerprinz99
    @kleinerprinz99 Год назад +2

    One could argue the Russian-Japanese War from 1904/5 was fought anachronistically. Already the rifles from the 1860s period were too deadly for Line Battle distance and yet majority of American Civil War was fought that way which also explains the high number of casualties. Opposite of that we see Häuserkampf in the Napoleonic Wars of 1812 , a pre-cursor of modern day combat. Its stupid to focus on one single item like Bayonet charges when you view it out of context. Cheers. PS: Beautiful unique sword piece!

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Год назад

      In napoleonic era, some prussian Landwehr units started field service with more pikes and axes than muskets. In wwll some british Home Guard men at first got pikes.

    • @taistelusammakko5088
      @taistelusammakko5088 Год назад

      ​@@brittakriep2938some finnish red guards got pikes too in finnish civil war. Thats because there werent enough rifles

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Год назад

      @@taistelusammakko5088 : Yes , when in 19th/20th century soldiers, mostly second line, militia or semiregular, got pikes or warscytes, a lack of firearms was the reason. I am not informed, bit i heared, that during wwll, local policemen in japanese occipied territoy sometimes used spears.

  • @JAKesler
    @JAKesler 11 месяцев назад

    I absolutely love it! ❤. I could totally see this as a prototype for something that would be adopted. Also this unique stuff is what inspires me for fantasy writing, world building

  • @JustGrowingUp84
    @JustGrowingUp84 Год назад

    That is one of the most interesting swords I have ever seen!

  • @RelativelyBest
    @RelativelyBest Год назад +1

    I actually rather like that hilt design. The only thing I'd do different is have the back quillon be longer and curve towards the blade. Just for aesthetic purposes, though (with saber-type hilts I always find myself wanting something sticking out on the opposite side of the knuckle guard) and I assume it's so short to keep with the regulation profile in this case.

    • @Psittacus_erithacus
      @Psittacus_erithacus 8 месяцев назад

      … or comfort. Long quillons are a bother to wear. The longer, the more bothersome. Especially if you are ever required to bend over (ie keep your head down) or sit. Both of which seem like plausible parts of an infantry officer's day-to-day in that time period.

  • @squatch2461
    @squatch2461 Год назад

    Beautiful sword, from a functional perspective. Love it and the thought process of the person who bought it.

    • @patrickporter1864
      @patrickporter1864 Год назад

      The scene from Indian Jones to mind when you mention fighting with swords. Indie pulls his revolver an............

  • @jamesj4827
    @jamesj4827 11 месяцев назад

    What a stunning blade matt

  • @farkasmactavish
    @farkasmactavish Год назад

    Dude, you did such a good job of building up to it lmaooo

  • @caracoldeleche
    @caracoldeleche Год назад +1

    Life is always about context, timing and compromise. Also swords.

    • @crow4936
      @crow4936 Год назад

      I like knives big F off shiny ones......

    • @caracoldeleche
      @caracoldeleche Год назад

      @@crow4936 yeah, big and curved, wider in the base and with a strong penetrating tip. Maybe even blacked.

  • @Eulemunin
    @Eulemunin Год назад

    That’s a very cool blade. The hilt is not ugly, it’s fascinating.

  • @not-a-theist8251
    @not-a-theist8251 Год назад +1

    Please show the Wilkinson sword you talked about!

  • @Macovic
    @Macovic Год назад

    Very fascinating and thank you for sharing

  • @david.leikam
    @david.leikam 3 месяца назад

    A lovely sword and history/story.

  • @tatumergo3931
    @tatumergo3931 Год назад

    What limits the design mostly is the material from which it is made of. A light sabre, if that was even possible to be made, would be both an excellent cutter as well as an excellent thruster.

    • @AdamOwenBrowning
      @AdamOwenBrowning Год назад

      The weight, width, cross-section of the design, the curvature of the design or lack thereof, the level of safety offered to the user in the design, the points of tapering or lack thereof, the balance of the sword with fullers etc... it's not the steel here. It's how the design interfaces with a human being, both the user and one at the end of it.
      Heftier, thicker blades like the evolutions from 1892 are stiffer in spiking, better for thrusting as a result, yet they're more unwieldy than the slightly-curved designs from before.
      So the curved designs from before this time also make a sacrifice. At the tip of the blade, the design less firm, not straight-on like a spike, thinner and often wider. This makes for a better cut but a worse thrust. The design creates tradeoffs. Light sabres certainly exist, and they're not as good at thrusting as dedicated thrusting swords.
      It's not the material that creates the most limitation. Every design creates a sacrifice and an excellent bladesteel could be used to make a rather difficult-to-use (poor) weapon in war.

    • @tatumergo3931
      @tatumergo3931 Год назад

      @@AdamOwenBrowning . Then there's adamantium...
      P. S. The design is what it's used to compensate for the material being used. Copper stronger than Flint or stone, Bronze stronger than Copper, Iron stronger than Bronze, Steel stronger than Iron and so on as we discover new and better alloys or materials. A plastic or ceramic knife has to be made in a particular shape and design for the intended purpose, in order to take advantage of the material's qualities.

  • @ItalianAvalanche
    @ItalianAvalanche Год назад

    This is such a cool and unique piece! This is the kind of thing that a sword nerd would turn their nose at if they saw in a fantasy setting but now we can say WELL ACTUALLY

  • @jasonwarwick5062
    @jasonwarwick5062 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the comparison with the 1897 I have a better understanding of the provenance of the blade I inherited from my grandfather in KAR 🙏

  • @matthewvelo
    @matthewvelo Год назад

    I just wonder how the commissioning officer got away with carrying that sword around. I think it's an absolute beauty.

  • @MrPink-qf1xi
    @MrPink-qf1xi Год назад +2

    You know in games where you have customization options and spend hours looking at stats and designs. Making something that so out of place but so good at that one thing. This is kinda like that.

  • @AlexanderVRadev
    @AlexanderVRadev 11 месяцев назад

    I love the way it looks. I don't understand at all how you can say it is an ugly monstrosity. Also thanks for the overview of all of those swords. Really cool. :)

  • @TheLasTBreHoN
    @TheLasTBreHoN Год назад

    Would love to see a video about the most effective weapon for a immortal in the highlander franchise. It has to be able to behead and also easy to carry but also effective against whatever other weapon you may come up against.

  • @kennetth1389
    @kennetth1389 Год назад

    That is a beautiful piece of history.
    Truly a custom piece made to customers specification, wonder what the bladesmith thought of it.

  • @HypocriticYT
    @HypocriticYT Год назад

    Matt I thought this video was about a double edged narrow bladed Wilkinson that just sold at auction but this sword is exceptional.

  • @DerTypDa
    @DerTypDa Год назад +1

    Now I can't help but wonder if perhaps there was a similarly cut-obsessed officer around who contrived to have a falchion blade mounted to a regulation hilt.

  • @johnfisk811
    @johnfisk811 Год назад

    ‘Not so long ago’. This was during the period of my grandfather’s army service.

  • @chrisd561
    @chrisd561 11 месяцев назад

    Absolutely fascinating!

  • @billygm6dx720
    @billygm6dx720 5 месяцев назад

    Do you have any videos on Wing Chun Knifes / butterfly swords? I would love to hear your review on the design and purpose of that weapon.

  • @1guitarlover
    @1guitarlover 10 месяцев назад

    I love that advanced rapier-style sword.

  • @Publicistvideos
    @Publicistvideos Год назад +2

    “Giving point”

  • @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt
    @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt Год назад

    thanks

  • @Sightbain.
    @Sightbain. Год назад

    The best way to describe those rapier-esque primary thrust swords would be "Thrust and Slash" they can slash but I would be hesitant to say they can "cut" something like a falchion etc.

  • @simeondarke201
    @simeondarke201 Год назад

    Matt, how can you say that is ugly. I wouldn't hesitate to give that pride of place in my collection

  • @dzmitryzaitsau6471
    @dzmitryzaitsau6471 Год назад +2

    Wasn't Britain openly allied to Japan prior to the russo-japanese war?
    Doesn't seem right to say Britain was "secretly" supporting Japan, when in fact they were open allies.

  • @SingularityOrbit
    @SingularityOrbit Год назад +1

    I can just about make out why the knuckle guard was cut down, but I'm totally confused why anyone would hack off the upper section of the guard. Especially after pointing out the rapier's need for a robust guard, removing protection for the upper wrist and arm doesn't make sense. Unless he expected to hold it tilted upwards in guard position . . . but then he'd have wanted the knuckle guard back. Is it all just weight reduction?

  • @bencoomer2000
    @bencoomer2000 Год назад +1

    Ugly? That ain't ugly.
    Weird as hell, but not ugly.

  • @Jayboyd1260
    @Jayboyd1260 Год назад +2

    Awwwwww the moment that sword came on screen, I said to myself "Oh that looks so cool!" then Matt goes "[the sword] is super ugly!!" (15:58) hahahaha

  • @janlaarman236
    @janlaarman236 Год назад

    I think that guy thought that he was born too late and tried to deal with it.

  • @patrickporter1864
    @patrickporter1864 4 дня назад

    CRAZY OFFICER OR CRAZY SWORD DESIGN.

  • @Maxiius
    @Maxiius Год назад

    Love it! That blade geometry is just... 😘👌chef's kiss

  • @robertkb64
    @robertkb64 9 месяцев назад

    Heh, when you said people may think of earlier dedicated thrusting swords I instantly thought “estoc.” But you had to pick a sword with an actual blade, rather than a sharpened piece of rebar with a grip, didn’t you? :)
    P.S. for those not familiar with the estoc, it has no blade at all, only the point is sharpened, and the “blade” comes in many shapes including triangles, squares, rectangles, as well as unsharpened diamonds. It’s made exclusively as an anti-armor weapon which can trivially piece mail and is easy to half-sword because it has no edge and so allows one to simply charge and grapple even a knight in armor, then use your two handed rondel dagger replacement to wedge between the plates of your now downed opponent. It’s basically a pointed pry bar to attack armor with, and is comedically good against someone not prepared for it.

  • @mikeblair2594
    @mikeblair2594 Год назад

    The best and strongest way to create the blade would be to forge it with a top and bottom swage and then even it up with a hollowing week and clean and polish it by hand. The swages are a bear to make but once you have them, you can create all kinds of blades long and short. Folks will pay a pretty premium for a hand forged blade like that, but they like the hunting swords the most.

  • @BlandBrowser
    @BlandBrowser 11 месяцев назад

    Swords are cut thrust and chop. By chopping I mean swinging the sword so it hits the opponent without drawing the blade along the wound like slicing meat, instead chopping as we do an axe on a tree. Could you maybe explore the difference between cutting and chopping designs?

  • @laionidas7614
    @laionidas7614 Год назад

    The Italian guard deserves more love, from both Olympic fencers, as well as HEMA practioners.
    I had a foil, and was lucky to find a second one cheaply, from Uhlmann, in good condition, electric, fully compatible with modern systems, and with a true(!) ricasso.
    Negrini in Verona even still produce competition legal épées with Italian grip, and false ricasso (to fit standard FIE compliant blades).

  • @0KOrbU0
    @0KOrbU0 Год назад

    When you said they went all out on either cutting or thrusting, I thought he would have gotten an estoc.
    Gorgeous looking sword though :D

  • @rossdavies8250
    @rossdavies8250 Год назад

    What a beautiful blade on that "service rapier." I would love to have been able to chat with the guy who commissioned that sword and find out the reasoning behind the design...

  • @richardmcginnis5344
    @richardmcginnis5344 Год назад

    that's a cool sword, its like a super long dagger