Mods asleep, make haste!
Post complex Longsword techniques that have been preserved for over 500 years.
while you were busy being heterosexual i studied the blade.
(This is not the original a-o-s, they deleted a while back, we are mostly keeping an archive of their old posts here)
ALT-RIGHT, NAZIS, FASCISTS AND REDDIT WEIRDOS FUCK RIGHT OFF
Post complex Longsword techniques that have been preserved for over 500 years.
Dagger and sheath ornamented with Shagreen (Shark Skin), jade, gold, rubies, emeralds, sapphires and silver. Mughal India, 18th century. [2250x4000]
SWITCH TO FIREFOX AND ADD UBLOCK ORIGIN
Sword (96,5 cm: Ivory and steel), Netherlands second half of 17th c.[1157x2000]. Hilt of this sword depicts the rescue of Andromeda by Perseus
Not as much as you might think.
Games often overestimate how much a sword or an axe weighs, and the assumption that many people make is that this lump of steel in your hand is a great burden, although this assumption has been working is way out.
The simple fact of the matter is, medieval weapons are quite light.

The medieval Arming Sword, the single most common sword of the middle ages. One handed, ext to carry, you wouldn’t expect this one to be that heavy, and it isn’t. Arming Swords tend to weigh between 3 and 4 pounds / 1⅓ and 1.8kg, that’s it! This particular example weighs 3 lbs. 11 oz / 1.6kg.

The Longsword, a much longer weapon than the Arming Sword, as the name implies, and obviously much heavier. But it’s not.
Standard Longswords, especially later period ones designed more for thrusting (like the one pictured above,) can be shockingly light. They can weigh in the same range as arming swords, although they can weigh more as well.
Longswords tend to sit between 3 and 5 pounds / 1⅓ and 2.25kg, and this example is 3 lbs. 7oz. / 1.5kg meaning it weighs less than the Arming Sword pictured before!

The Rapier, a famously light and nimble weapon that is also clouded in a fog of incorrect assumptions. The rapier is a long weapon. This example measures 45 inches in the blade and isn’t even among the longest I’ve seen.
Including all that weight from the steel basket around your hand, and it starts to add up. Rapiers can however be quite light, so including the extremes of the spectrum you end up with a range of between 2.5 pounds and 5 pounds / 1.1 and 2.25kg. This particular example is on the lighter side, weighing 2 lbs. 13 oz / 1.3kg.

The Zweihander, the famous greatsword, surely this is a much heavier weapons! Well of course it’s heavier than the others, the entire thing is five and a half feet tall, however they are deceptively light.
Zweihander weigh, on average, 6 pounds / 2.7kg. That’s it, only 6 pounds. Some on the heavier side weigh about 7lbs / 3.1kg, but they rarely exceed that. This example weighs 6 lbs. 2 oz. / 2.8kg.

Moving away from swords, axes will surely be heavier, won’t they? Think again.
There is an important distinction between battle axes and wood cutting axes. Battle Axe heads tend to be thin, very thin, good for cutting flesh and bone, and easier to wield. Wood cutting heads are wider so as to be more robust, and split wood open more efficiently, and let’s not even talk about splitting mauls.
As such, one handed battle aces like this tend only to weigh between 1 and 4 pounds / 0.45 and 1.8kg. They can be very very light! The example is 1 lb. 7 oz. / 0.65kg.

Warhammer even tend to stick to that same range, between 1 and 4 pounds / 0.45 and 1.80. This example is 2 lbs. 8 oz / 1.15kg.
It’s only once you reach polearms that you begin getting heavier weights. The weights of a polearm is greatly changed by the length of it’s shaft, which can vary greatly, so these numbers will be somewhat more flexible.

Spears tend to be the lightest polearms, often weighing between 3 and 6 pounds / 1.⅓ and 2.7kg, with this example coming in at 4 lbs. even / 1.8kg.

Poleaxes, tending to be on the shorter end of polearms, also tend to be lighter. Interestingly, the examples I’ve seen are quite consistent, and all weigh between 6 and 7 pounds / 2.7 and 3.175kg, though greater variation is possible. This example weighs 6 lbs. 9 oz / 3kg.

Halberds tend to be even heavier, though examples in museums tend to have hafts that are too short simply for storage and display purposes.
As such, the weights tend to be somewhat off, however we know from period sources and good modern reproductions that properly sized balberds tend to be about 8 pounds. This museum piece fits the “too light” mould, and weighs 5 lbs. 10 oz / 2.5kg.

For the purposes of giving you (the reader) a proper appreciation of what the pike is, I elected to not use a museum photo for this one, so you can see their full scale.
The pike is a massive weapon, and these piles being used by reenactors in this photo are quite short. On the shorter end, they measured over 10 feet / 3m in length, and on the lookout get end occasionally hit 30 feet / 9.1m !
These could be the heaviest melee weapons typically used in medieval/renaissance warfare, and even these only weigh between 5 and 13 pounds / 2.25 and 5.9kg.
With your heaviest weapons only weighing 13 pounds at their most extreme, this paints a good picture of how light these hand weapons tended to be. Something for RPG and video game developers to keep in mind in the future.
- mod Armet
Dagger with Scabbard, Arms and Armor

A fantastic blue and gilt Sabre that belonged to General Étienne Gudin, French, ca. before 1812, from Bertrand Malvaux.
Dagger (Chilanum) with Sheath, Arms and Armor
Political Artefacts from Britain during the 19th Century on display at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh
The sword was presented to Major William Murray of Polmaise of the Stirlingshire Yeomanry. The Yeomanry were cavalry units established to help keep law and order in Britain during the Napoleonic Wars. In 1820 was in command when his unit clashed violently with weavers. They were marching on the Carron Iron Works to seize weapons for a planned radical uprising in Scotland.
The badge and whistle belonged to a special constable in the Burgh of Calton, Glasgow in 1817. Extra policemen were recruited in response to mass anti-government demonstrations in Glasgow.
The pike head was stored as a weapon to be used by the political reform society the People of Kilsyth. Such societies were inspired by the French Revolution and operated in secret against the land owning classes.
Photographs taken by myself