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  • ...inally learning the art of sword fighting with a particular focus on early sword fighting techniques such as the manuscript I.33.
    335 bytes (53 words) - 07:10, 19 January 2013
  • == Creating an experimental HEMA system for Early Medieval Sword and Shield == In January 2016, he started experimenting with the 'Viking Age weapons', and have been experimenting with it ever since.
    2 KB (256 words) - 04:27, 22 February 2022
  • ...ncient Greek fields of study. I have recently acquired a fully functional sword and was looking for some manuals or books of historic fighting styles and e
    419 bytes (75 words) - 02:16, 24 August 2020
  • |name= Arming sword ...33)|MS I.33]] manuscript, dated to ca. 1300, shows fencing with the arming sword and the [[buckler]].
    5 members (2 subcategories, 0 files) - 03:11, 21 September 2012
  • '''Ewart Oakeshott's typology''' of the medieval [[sword]] is based on [[blade]] [[shape|morphology]]. It categorizes swords into 13 ...[[Viking sword]], introduced in ''De Norske Vikingsverd'' ("The Norwegian Viking Swords", 1919), modified in 1927 by [[R. E. M. Wheeler]] into a typology of
    8 KB (1,219 words) - 02:17, 21 September 2012
  • ...nder of the ''Oakeshott Institute''. His classification of the medieval [[sword]], the [[Oakeshott Typology]], lives on today as the premiere work on the s ...roundbreaking. Dr. Jan Peterson had previously developed a typology for [[Viking]] swords consisting of twenty-six categories. Peterson's typology was simpl
    4 KB (654 words) - 22:27, 24 November 2013