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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Defense and<br />

disarming moves<br />

as taught by the<br />

enormously<br />

influential Italian<br />

Master of Defence<br />

Fiore dei Liberi.<br />

This illustration<br />

appeared in his Flos<br />

Duellatorium<br />

(Flower of Battle),<br />

first published in<br />

1410. (Courtesy of<br />

John Clements)<br />

572 Swordsmanship, European Medieval<br />

used was not uniform throughout the Middle Ages.<br />

Many schools of fighting even developed different<br />

methods for armored and unarmored combat.<br />

Most medieval combat, however, pitted mail-clad<br />

warriors armed with shield, spear, ax, and sword<br />

against one another. It is important not to characterize<br />

all medieval combat by means of the cliché of<br />

the knight in shining armor. Throughout the period,<br />

plate-armor was the exception, not the norm, and<br />

represented only a fraction of armor types worn.<br />

Used primarily by knights and wealthy men-atarms,<br />

plate-armor existed in countless varieties, and<br />

the later style of fully encasing, fully articulated<br />

plate-armor must be distinguished from the earlier<br />

forms. Much medieval European plate-armor is ingenious<br />

and unequaled anywhere in the world. Although<br />

the use of plate-armor did decrease speed<br />

and agility, its use was not nearly as debilitating or<br />

restrictive as popular belief suggests.<br />

<strong>The</strong> shield, among the earliest and most obvious<br />

forms of personal defense, served as an adjunct<br />

to armor for most of the Middle Ages. In the<br />

crowded clash of battle with spears and arrows,<br />

holding a deflecting cover makes great sense for a<br />

warrior. In the push and shove of mass warfare<br />

there might be fewer opportunities to employ one’s<br />

weapon, but a shield will get almost constant use.<br />

In closer combat, the utility of the shield is evident<br />

in the way it allows a warrior to block slashes and<br />

thrusts while still allowing counterattacks. With the<br />

many classes of medieval shield and the highly developed<br />

methods of employing them, these ancient tools were represented<br />

in a highly effective form. Like the medieval sword, medieval shields are familiar<br />

objects that frequently have been undervalued. Like the sword, medieval<br />

European shields were by no means uniform or universal. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

ranged from larger oval and round forms to long teardrop and triangular<br />

kite shapes, and small hand-bucklers. Due mainly to the rise of heavy cavalry<br />

and the coming of plate-armor, shields underwent several changes during<br />

the Middle Ages.<br />

Weapon blows were devastating in their effect, and armor alone was<br />

simply not sufficient protection (at least not until the later advent of full<br />

plate). In all its varied forms, the medieval shield could be used passively

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