I have always preferred the term "parrying dagger". It's a dagger with added parrying ability. This fact is true whether it is in your left hand or used alone.
@glowstickofdestiny12909 ай бұрын
Or used alone in your left hand
@scelonferdi9 ай бұрын
That's in fact the name by which I learned about them. It was much later that I came across Main Gauche or left hand dagger
@Wub-rv9xx9 ай бұрын
now I want one so I could call it a left-land dagger while holding it in my right, 'cuz I'm a bastard lefty that way
@MM-gk1tm9 ай бұрын
You're right, partying dagger is definitely the better term.
@laoxep8 ай бұрын
@@MM-gk1tm I think parrying dagger is a better term especially if you are left handed
@samuelprice24619 ай бұрын
The little dagger you brought with you is better than the huge dagger you left at home!
@silverjohn60379 ай бұрын
It's never wise to assume something is "popular" because it's better than something else. When I was a kid the Dirty Harry films had made revolvers with heavy bull barrels and vent ribs popular. Now there was a reason for the bull barrels (to reduce muzzle whip and manage heavier recoil) and the vent rib (to help cool the barrel during extended target shooting sessions) but most of the people weren't choosing those kind of revolvers for those reasons. They were choosing them because it was the latest coolest thing. Looking back people can laugh at people buying snub nosed .38's with vent ribs and bull barrels but then they go out and buy an AR 15 with 36" more picatinny rails that they will ever need for mounting accessories. The change to the parrying dagger may have had the same logic and have absolutely nothing to do with a practical reason. All it takes is some clever young fop in 1530 saying "Hey, the 1510's want their bucklers back."
@b.h.abbott-motley24279 ай бұрын
This is an important point. It's worth noting that bucklers stuck around for the entire 16th century & beyond, even though become less commonly worn & paired with swords than daggers. Miguel Pérez de Mendoza y Quijada wrote about fencing with & wearing the buckler in 1675. It's debatable whether the buckler or the dagger is the better companion to the sword, but the dagger definitely wins in terms of versatility & generally in terms of convenience.
@joshtiscareno13129 ай бұрын
The dagger is also substantially more *lethal* than the buckler is. If someone is able to get past your sword and close to grappling distance, the bucker isn't the best tool to attack them. The dagger, on the other hand, was MADE for fighting at grappling distances. This gives your opponent a good reason to keep his distance and fight at maximum range.
@MasoTrumoi9 ай бұрын
This is true, but it's also worth noting that media wasn't quite as widespread back in the day, and certainly no films to draw a direct parallel. Stories back then were usually more like poetry or plays and rarely were weaponry specified or setting the standard there. Tournaments were the closest thing they had to action films. Trends would thus be based on a mixture of local preferences and conditions. As Matt put it, maybe the dagger is "worse" with a sword than a buckler, but when these side weapons are alone the dagger is far superior. Thus if you find the conditions dictate you need a back up weapon in different situations, you'd always prefer the dagger to the buckler. In addition to that yeah it looks pretty cool. But that would probably be set up by seeing a fellow fighter use it in an interesting and effective way. Though it might not be the most efficient choice, it would be a standard set by a trusted superior or a live fight, not a performance where the details can be smudged. In that instance the worst case scenario is if you have a mentor who pretends to know what they're talking about but does not actually. Instead of Dirty Harry, you were looking out for the "bullshido master".
@PJDAltamirus04259 ай бұрын
Funny thing is that the Chinese essentially have a buckler which essentially is about as lethal as a dagger. Skall did a video about it. Must have a pain to carry cus as far as a I know, it didn’t catch of anywhere else
@b.h.abbott-motley24279 ай бұрын
@@PJDAltamirus0425 I wouldn't say the gou-rang is as lethal as dagger, though it's certainly more dangerous than a simple round buckler. European bucklers did sometimes have spikes, but that also makes them harder to wear conveniently, like the gou-rang. In theory, a buckler with a retractable blade like that one famous lantern shield would be a way around the convenience problem. I'm not aware of any historical buckers that had such retractable blades, but that lantern shield shows it was possible with 16th-century technology. Holding a buckler & dagger together, as Hans Talhoffer showed, would be another option, though this presumably requires a few seconds or so of prep time.
@StygianEmperor9 ай бұрын
dual-wielding is cool-wielding
@jayred29089 ай бұрын
Can confirm flo ftw
@kyuken8939 ай бұрын
...and not for fools-wielding.
@ScarecrowsSwords9 ай бұрын
Learn FMA dual wielding is taught out the gate
@umartdagnir9 ай бұрын
But what if your dagger is hot?
@StygianEmperor9 ай бұрын
@@umartdagnir even better
@jonathanyaeger22899 ай бұрын
In “Method of Teaching the Masters” (1639, Southern Spain) Viedma notes that you dagger should be at least 1 half vara (16.5 in) long and later references a 24 in dagger blade in a way the indicates it especially long. He also has a section on defending oneself against a sword with only a dagger, saying you might one day be caught out without a sword.
@Lohgoss9 ай бұрын
In 1540 Altoni mentions, that the buckler has been abandoned in Italy for some time for its association with men of evil intent and started to be proscribed; Altoni, Monomachia p.117. Mind I am lifting this reference from a work on Giganti, someone having read Altoni might have more context. So for Italy swashbuckler swashbuckled so hard they got the buckler banned in some areas of Italy around mid 16th century. Further in 1601 Docciolini mentions it started to make a comeback specificly at night. Of note is that both references originate from Florence.
@mnk90739 ай бұрын
Pretty sure walking around the inner city with a buckler then was the same as walking around the inner city with a baseball bat these days. My guess is the treaty of Lyon in 1601 meant lots of unemployed Piemontese soldiers loitering around northern Italy.
@cwmyr9 ай бұрын
Amazing reference ! Any idea on why the comeback at night specifically?
@Lohgoss9 ай бұрын
@@cwmyr this is only speculation, but with bad vision in low light conditions parrying a thrust is quite hard so the buckler covering a larger area just by holding it in front of the body is safer than the dagger, which requires "active" parrying.
@jritchey2679 ай бұрын
@@Lohgoss Also consider that if carrying a buckler brought unwanted attention, it would just be easier to get away with at night.
@AdlerMow8 ай бұрын
@@Lohgoss What's amazing is that the italians invented the lantern buckler exactly at that time, so guards had a double use item!
@Honeybadger_5259 ай бұрын
Great points Matt! I've fought with rapier and dagger many times, however it didn't become so apparent to me how much of a pain it is to be wearing a sword all the time until I wore both weapons at a local renaissance fair. I ended up leaving the sword at my guild's encampment for most of the event and kept the dagger on my belt. If I was forced to defend myself with what I had on my person, I still have a dagger and sometimes a cloak which I suspect were commonly employed together in self defense. Would love to see a future video exploring that weapon combination.
@drzander33789 ай бұрын
@Honeybadger_525, Marozzo has a section on cloak and dagger.
@Honeybadger_5259 ай бұрын
Yes he does! Marozzo was specifically who I was thinking of. I don't know of any other fencing manuals from that period that specifically discuss cloak and dagger. I do know that some later knife fighting traditions sometimes employ cloaks, coats or ponchos in the off hand.
@flametitan1009 ай бұрын
@@Honeybadger_525 Fabris is 50 years later than Marozzo, but his treatise brings up a point which may explain why dagger and cloak wasn't as popular in that period as it could be. In it, he says the biggest advantage of the cloak was that it could be used in jurisdictions where the dagger was banned. To me, this implies that Dagger and cloak's unpopularity was due to circumstance. If you were using a cloak, it was because the dagger was banned, and if the dagger's not banned, you'd prefer to use sword and dagger. Now, that was an assumption on my part and could be off base; Fabris tried to keep his book from having too many different subjects in favour of going deep into rapier specifically, so it could just be that cloak and dagger was excluded for brevity's sake like sword and buckler were. It could be Cloak and Dagger were popular and treatises on them just don't surface as frequently; It wasn't until the 2010's we discovered Giganti book 2 was real, after all.
@laufert71009 ай бұрын
Try it, dagger and cape is insanely chaotic and fun!
@Zbigniew_Nowak8 ай бұрын
@@laufert7100 I read that long ago Roman legionaries used large, strong daggers to parry blows if they did not have a shield with them. But for me, with no experience in fencing, fighting with two objects at the same time in two hands seems to be an abstraction that probably requires superhuman coordination. But well, I used to think the same way about turning the steering wheel of a car and changing gears manually at the same time.
@Wodan859 ай бұрын
In Switzerland we call it a Parierdolch (parry dagger)
@brandond99009 ай бұрын
11:30 starts talking about the size of left hand dagger, and how they were normally much shorter. I typically train with a rebated Tod Cutter quillon dagger, and Matt is definitely correct on how much it changes things from using something like a sail dagger.
@tommeakin17328 ай бұрын
Forgive me, my le Francais isn't as strong as it should be for an English speaker; does "rebated" mean "blunted" in my ugly, mutt tongue?
@peterleblanc6619 ай бұрын
It is always interesting how much daggers and swords parallel modern firearms here in the US. Like that these are side arms and not the primary. Where with fire arms a pistol is a side arm and a rifle is a primary. And some of the most popular pistols are very small and light weight not because that is superior for shooting(in fact heavier ones are typically used in competitions) but because they are easy to carry/conceal. In both cases it's a huge compromise between what would be best in case of actual fight that will probably never happen vs what is convenient to carry everyday without using it. Also a nice reminder that just because this was long ago these people were not dumb. They did things the way they did for practical reasons that may be hard for us to see without living with a sword on our hip.
@johnladuke64758 ай бұрын
Another point towards that analogy is the few cases where big hand cannons are actually preferable. Picturing the old west, or even modern ranchers, sometimes a large and powerful pistol is the choice. But why? Because a rifle might be a bit much to be carrying around, but a compact and light pistol doesn't have enough power to get the job done.
@If-ish9 ай бұрын
Another thing that could have contributed to the popularity of daggers over bucklers is hand protection. One of the common uses of a buckler is to protect your sword hand, with the rise of complex hilts this becomes less important.
@PJDAltamirus04258 ай бұрын
Yeah, and what people are referring to with the printing press on a societal level. A Renaissance man probably owned and carried more stuff than a medieval man. More trade, even from exotic places the old world and the new world to Europe, printing presses starting to makes the first kinda relatively afforadly books, more money based economy and civilians are less tolerance of encumbrance than soldiers, soldiers have put with bulky and heavy throughout history. The place where that isn’t the case , where people walk around heavily armed, like the Scottish highlands and I think India with the sikhs have been noted by outsiders as strange and lawless.
@Cleanpea8 ай бұрын
Not only that, it takes more effort to move the sword around the buckler, the more complex the hilt. Probably part of why later buckler sources advices the buckler to be held out from the body, separate from the sword?
@b.h.abbott-motley24279 ай бұрын
Though bucker use declined in relative terms, even simple round bucklers continued to exist & to appear in fencing treatises throughout the 16th century & beyond. Giacomo di Grassi's 1570 manual, for example, features a simple round bucker & claims one could easily defend against thrusts with it. Di Grassi used a cut-&-thrust sword (a sidesword, if you want to use that term) but favored the thrust over the cut. & Miguel Pérez de Mendoza y Quijada thought both dagger & the bucker were awesome to use in conjunction with the rapier & wanted to bring them back into fashion, as he wrote in his 1675 treatise.
@Kamamura29 ай бұрын
It seems that the really popular combo, historically vastly preferred, is unjustifiably overlooked in these analyses. Yes, I am talking about the sword and butler combo. Consider the advantages - the butler carries the sword, you have your hands free to engage in whatever social and less than social activity of your choice. If circumstances escalate, you signal your butler, he draws the sword and protects you. If there are legal problems afterwards, the butler goes to prison, you hire another butler, rinse and repeat, smooth and trouble-free solution.
@hanno_t9 ай бұрын
One of the pertinent examples of this point is the Scottish Dirk. It was used both as a left-hand weapon in addition to the broad-sword (sometimes held in conjunction with a targe), but also as a stand-alone weapon where necessary.
@Daniel_D_King9 ай бұрын
I absolutely adore tods alehouse dagger. Paired nicely with a basket hilted broadsword or back sword. Also darkwood armoury small pierced sail hilt dagger.
@kyuken8939 ай бұрын
Thanks for covering this topic Matt. Ive recently been looking into learning more about left hand dagger use as it compares to Jitte use. Its interesting how they are both defensive sidearms that developed in societies where dueling was common.
@Kingfisher_23769 ай бұрын
Another thing I think you wandered close to but didn't mention explicitly; even in the era of sword and buckler, a person who lost or gave up their sword probably still had a dagger on them. So rather than being a trade, it was more a matter of merely giving up the shield with no other change to one's accoutrements. This is potentially reinforced by the exceptionality of bulky daggers (as you mentioned), since the buckler would likely be even bulkier than that dagger in turn, making them even less convenient for everyday carry. From there, the first use of sword and dagger together might have been incidental, driven by the once momentary to defend oneself while already/only carrying two one-handed weapons (as opposed to three).
@5ringsmaster9 ай бұрын
I humorously refer to my Bolognese style parrying dagger, when I'm giving lessons, as a main-droit. (Left handed coach here.) I'll then tell my students that when they use it, it's a main-gauche.
@mlo90059 ай бұрын
As a fellow lefty, I have to ask: Where do you find asymmetrical weapons suited for left handers?
@drzander33789 ай бұрын
Excuse the pedantry but it’s ‘droite’, not ‘droit’ as ‘main’ is feminine.
@5ringsmaster9 ай бұрын
@@drzander3378 Thank you! My French is very very rudimentary. As many Parisians who have assisted me in the past know very well.
@5ringsmaster9 ай бұрын
@@mlo9005 A number of antique saber guards (especially for gymnasium swords) are symmetrical. I find cheap broken ones, and remount the guards. Rapiers, I’ve had students build several guards for me, and cup hilts are typically symmetrical. Court swords are generally not difficult. Turn the blade over.
@Blokewood38 ай бұрын
I made that joke too when I learned rapier and dagger! 😊 Main droits unite!
@robinswords8 ай бұрын
A great video as always. To the point about what you pair it with, I'm actually commissioning a matched sword and dagger but the sword is more of a half and a half situation. I'm having it styled after those half-baskets that you covered a while back.
@pexobestia8 ай бұрын
About bucklers with point breaking capability in Renaissance, spanish literary sources tell about "corchetes", shields made of cork and light wood, sported by the guards in Madrid and other big cities, to the point of being the nameshake of those guards ( "then came the corchetes")
@TheGoldenBear799 ай бұрын
Thanks Matt! Brilliant as usual Sir. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and doing it in such a fun & interesting way. I always enjoy and look forward to your content. From “across the pond”, my best wishes to you and your family. ✌️🌎
@jonasbarka9 ай бұрын
Even as a HEMA dagger user, much of this was new information for me!
@MH-yp6wg9 ай бұрын
Very interesting! The dagger is my favorite weapon. Please make that a series and make some more videos about it... because we've heard so much about swords, it's time for something new! :)
@jiffypoo50299 ай бұрын
Off-hand dagger makes more sense to me personally. Left hand dagger is in the right hand if you like to doing left hand dominant practice to develop a bit of ambidextrous muscle memory.
@afellowsoulofash83829 ай бұрын
3:36 having that for dinner, also great video Matt, as always.
@lunacorvus35859 ай бұрын
Great video! Dagger has always been one of my favorite off hand weapons, would like to see more about it.
@zoltanbereczki71629 ай бұрын
If you're still looking for an alternate name for those, in hungarian its called a "hárítótőr", which means "parry dagger".
@olivertanacs52179 ай бұрын
Üdvözletem! Csak ki akartam fejezni az örömömet hogy vannak más magyarok is akik Matt videóit figyelik. Legyen a napja kellemes és örömteli! :)
@jellekastelein73169 ай бұрын
Would love to see more on the antique 17th century swords behind you Matt!
@emarsk778 ай бұрын
Just a thought from my personal experience about a further possible(?) explanation of the transition from buckler to dagger. As we can see in I-33, if the sword has a simple cross-guard, a buckler is excellent for protecting the sword hand (while a dagger is pretty rubbish at that). But if the sword has a more developed hilt, the buckler is less necessary as a hand protector, and in Marozzo for example we see it often held in front while the sword moves around it pretty independently. In fact, a complex hilt (or even just a long cross-guard) is a nuisance if you try to fence in the I-33 style. I also find that a dagger is better than a buckler not only against thrusts, but also against cuts. Admittedly, I have more experience with dagger than with buckler, so that may be a factor, but still, the dagger is perfectly adequate for parring even powerful cuts, especially if used in conjunction with the sword at the moment of the impact, and then employed as a controlling device while the sword is free to leave the bind and hit through an opening. A buckler, on the other hand, often deflects the incoming blow rather than stopping it, and has a limited capacity to control a bind on its own.
@Matasiete6666 ай бұрын
The dagger became popular, because in times of peace and in cities or towns, carrying a shield was quite a heavy task. While a short sword and a rapier could be carried without difficulty. Greetings from Spain.
@ericthompson39828 ай бұрын
In Filipino blade arts, we have a style called Espada y Dagga that is very closely related to Spanish fencing, since the Spanish were one of the biggest colonizers of the Philippines. It's loaded heavily with separate actions between the right and left hand, to unbalance an opponent. It also serves the purpose of defending, as the dagger acts almost as a shield. Obviously, that's a slightly reductive explanation.
@dreembarge9 ай бұрын
Thanks, Matt.
@Yandarval8 ай бұрын
Parrying dagger would be the obvious choice. As that is what it is mainly carried for. Defending from and parrying blows.
@therecalcitrantseditionist36139 ай бұрын
Funny to see this pop into my feed since i have been recently trying to research parry daggers in the 18th century.
@DamienNeverwinter8 ай бұрын
*Matt would you please make a video explaining the differences between Spanish, French and Italian fencing?*
@Oblomovrising8 ай бұрын
Very interesting, thank you !
@asa-punkatsouthvinland71459 ай бұрын
I've always preferred "parrying dagger" or if it suits "quillon dagger". This is in part because rondel, Bullock & other dagger types are not generally used as an offhand weapon to sword/rapier. Yes rondels & other types were used to parry when used alone but not as an offhand weapon (or at least rarely as I can think of no examples in art).
@MarshOakDojoTimPruitt8 ай бұрын
thanks
@DeanNatheos-i2t8 ай бұрын
Excellent thanks 👍.
@hraefn18218 ай бұрын
Complex hand protection daggers like that, of a more substantial size than a typical dagger, I can see being the Rogue "daggers" of choice in a D&D setting. Makes far more sense. Small and concealable for the knifey shiv dark...and able to parry weapons effectively if you make too much noise while being a sneak XD
@JCOwens-zq6fd2 ай бұрын
This is a good point. As an aside in Eastern Europe & Persia they for sure carried the Qama/Qame/Kindjal short sword in conjunction with the saber for this same purpose. The short sword went with them even places the saber did not. I don't see why the West wouldn't also do this. Especially cultures that like the Eastern Europeans & Persians descend from the Steppe peoples of the black sea region.
@KGatLC8 ай бұрын
Beautiful dagger.
@Nabterayl9 ай бұрын
It’s fun to see more Bolognese-aware content on your channel, Matt!
@texasbeast2399 ай бұрын
In the D&D "The Legend of Drizzt" book series by R.A. Salvatore, assassin/fighter Artemis Entreri fights with a variety of long blades on the right, and a signature dagger on the left. But he seems to prefer to use the smaller weapon for most of his work. It's almost as if he likes to parry or bind with the sword, then close in and strike with the dagger. There is never a super clear description of his prized weapon in the books, but here are the highlights. It is covered in emeralds, with a magical garnet in the pommel, all embedded in silvery metal. It has a crossguard of some sort, but there has never been a mention of a finger ring or curved terminals "printing" on his cloak or jacket while sheathed. And the blade is only about as long as a man's head is tall, for he once drove it under a man's jaw up into his brain, and the point stopped in the underside of the man's skull, with the guard under his chin. Such a short blade might be more difficult to defend with than either of the fighting knives Matt presents here, but it would definitely help him to conceal it for his shadier missions.
@vedymin19 ай бұрын
He liked it more couse it stole vitality with every strike and gave it to him, a vampiric dagger. So he could easily exhaust the opponent with even tiny lacerations. At least thats what i member x)
@texasbeast2399 ай бұрын
@@vedymin1 Yeah, but I was trying to steer clear of the magical aspects and focus on the purely martial ones.
@knate449 ай бұрын
I'm excited for more lefty dagger content
@vinceblasco8 ай бұрын
Complex hilted rapiers essentially have the buckler incorporated into the hilt so you might as well have another implement in the other hand with both offensive and defensive capabilities.
@davideddy85579 ай бұрын
I was just thinking about this the other day in regards to 'alehouse daggers'
@lukewilliams85489 ай бұрын
Nice I'm curious to see some sparring or demonstrations with parrying dagger vs pole arm.
@ShagShaggio9 ай бұрын
Awesome daggers. Cheers!
@DanielRossi-u2u8 ай бұрын
Wow I can''t be the only one who noticed EL CAPITÁN ALATRISTE. Love that movie.
@Robert0408679 ай бұрын
What about ale house daggers? Especially basket hilted.
@ChloeV-c3d9 ай бұрын
Dear Sant..... nevermind, Schola much appreciate the content on the 'main gauche', I recently acquired a rapier and am attempting to currently forge my own parrying dagger.
@SingularityOrbit8 ай бұрын
Thinking about using the weapon as one's only weapon, I have a new appreciation for why it's called a "left hand" dagger. You can use your off hand to parry while your more dextrous dominant hand is free to grapple. If you can catch the opponent's weapon with the dagger, then grip their arm or sleeve while closing in, then they're completely out of line and trapped inside your dagger's range. It's essentially the sword vs spear tactical problem in a different scale -- and using your free man to trap the longer weapon works the same way.
@mpsmith473048 ай бұрын
ooooo... I WANT that dagger!!!!
@RSW66668 ай бұрын
Matt, when going about your daily business and not expecting trouble, wearing a simple, lighter long dagger makes sense. My question is about the Cinquedea; AKA a sword for when you don't want to wear a sword but still have the mass to block a full sword. It's also good for tight quarters and concealing under your cloak. I wear a Schivonna and a Cinquedea with my 1530 Northern Italian outfit and consider myself well armed. What do you think about a left had Cinquedea? It may not have the extensive guard, but the mass is an aid to parrying a long sword or thicker side sword.
@PJDAltamirus04259 ай бұрын
Was the itailian cinqueda maybe somene started trying to make a cheaper version of this? The meaty blade, short sword length, wide tringle for cutting and thrusting, larger quillons for parrying. The nailed construction is easier to than the percise friction fit of a crossguard.
@jritchey2679 ай бұрын
My understanding is that part of why bucklers fell out of favor is that they are more or less limited to one purpose, and carrying one started to hold the connotation that you were a little too eager for a fight. On the other hand, daggers can at least ostensibly claim utility uses, even if the claim might be pretty thin for some.
@MH-yp6wg8 ай бұрын
Please also make a video about the offensive (!) potential of the parrying dagger as well.
@PXCharon9 ай бұрын
I tend to fence with a small simple dagger as a companion specifically because it's the sort of thing you're likely to carry every day. 10" blade, open ring, and short forward curved guard. I don't worry much about my hand getting hit either, since it's held near the forte of the sword, one defends the other.
@jayred29089 ай бұрын
Would love to see a video covering historical examples of all weapons used dual wielding.
@Magey_McMage9 ай бұрын
Your comment on only wearing daggers in certain situations makes me think of the Burgundian-driven court fashion and culture of the mid-late 15th century. If you look at paintings the only things worn were roundel daggers on the belt, usually at an angle. While there are clearly examples of "court" swords (IX 949 being probably the most famous example) and swords where the form is almost as important as the form, the dagger seems to be the fashion statement and defensive tool of choice. In many cases you see them angled towards the left hand as well (though artist bias and perspective should be taken into account). Looking at artwork from the reigns of Duke Philip the Good and Charles the Bold of Burgundy and even within the court of Maximilian and Mary as seen in L'arbre des batailles can give you many examples of the dagger, and the left hand dagger, being the primary tool, especially among those richest enough to follow and even set the fashion trends!
@ns9879 ай бұрын
For close combat, the blade should not be too long. Fights and self-defense situations are not always a duel. For example, it could happen suddenly in a tower span or a tavern or a room... You can't fight with a long blade there. The length of the blade can sometimes be a disadvantage. In addition, it is better to use a blade that is not too long if you fall to the ground and engage your enemy from a lying or sitting position. Yes, this kind of situation is not very suitable for cinema, unlike duels. But life is not a movie and never has been..
@Leftyotism8 ай бұрын
The best part about "left hand daggers" is, that you can use them with your right hand as well. 🥰
@kaialoha5 ай бұрын
A bowie of 14 inches concealed behind the back. Maybe Crocodile Dundee style. Heft with trapping trident quillions. Comfort and stealth.
@PJDAltamirus04258 ай бұрын
Wait, with the way the large parrying dagger it designed, you could flatofmystrong!!! A thrust aside. :p The dreaded JC lives!
@brassbandmission16439 ай бұрын
The forthcoming basket hilt sword sounds very promising!
@Milkthief9 ай бұрын
I think main gauche is a fine name for them, it does just mean left hand, but it also is pretty synonymous with the dagger (at least in video games and such).
@Watari_toppa9 ай бұрын
Sir John Smythe recommends a short dagger with a small cross guard on the battlefield, but is this better suited than a long dagger for close combat in dense pike squares? The average blade length of Japanese wakizashi is in the 40-cm range, which is longer than the 9-10 inch (22-25cm) short dagger recommended by Smythe, but some literature recommends carrying a tanto (blade length of about 20cm or more) along with.
@b.h.abbott-motley24279 ай бұрын
In tight quarters & grappling, a shorter dagger/knife definitely has advantages.
@christianroberts81349 ай бұрын
Dang it Matt, I thought you were going to highlight some great hand weapon for us 'Sinister' fans! Still very cool.
@Stephen_Curtin9 ай бұрын
I know you brought up Marozzo's section on the dagger used in the right hand as a main weapon, but it's a pity you didn't mention his section on cloak and dagger.
@hitandhope73559 ай бұрын
I reckon the holes on the guard would've got thrusts stuck, like a bind. Did the popularity of daggers over bucklers co-incide with the trend to thrusts as opposed to cuts?
@basilbrushbooshieboosh53029 ай бұрын
Adore Lucy's dagger. The lightness appeals, the hefty pommel also.
@CalanonАй бұрын
In Silver he talks about both dagger and poniard - do you reckon one of the kinds of parrying dagger is what he's thinking of as a poniard?
@robertb68899 ай бұрын
Could the shift to a dagger be related to the handle-style and the added inconvenience of a buckler with a large hand guard on the sword - how do they generally fit together when worn?
@Hello_once_more8 ай бұрын
I must ask will the previous wave of Cutlass, Windlass swords be discontinued?
@stephens22419 ай бұрын
I always chuckle to myself whenever Matt mentions Bolognese sources. Mmmm... Bolognese sauces.
@koosh1389 ай бұрын
and without the buckler, you won't have to worry about all the clanging noise following you everywhere
@philkrebb36488 ай бұрын
Great video. But I want to go on records to say that I want my basement wall to look like Matt's garage door display and collection rack. 😁
@kahn049 ай бұрын
I may be way off but looking at that dagger I can’t help but think of the cinquedea, small (relatively speaking) package but robust enough to hold its own against larger weapons
@richardhenry19698 ай бұрын
When does a dagger become a short sword? What determine a dagger from a small sword? One other question ive always wondered. Back in the say time of crusades did a soldier have different type of swords or did they have one sword one spear ? Or did they carry different kinds of swords. Anyone?
@voodooray9 ай бұрын
I mean looking at the size of that thing it more then makes sense you could/would use it by itself
@-RONNIE9 ай бұрын
Good video ⚔️
@grantcox47649 ай бұрын
Hmmmm, maybe you could test out your theory during the upcoming 'Armoured Fighter' workshop. Would be interesting to see the results vs various polearms.
@FraxinusExelsior9 ай бұрын
Even depictions of soldiers show the wearing of smaller size daggers, so like much in the 17th cen alot of different types where used.
@braddbradd56719 ай бұрын
Id like to see that big dagger in action catching swords what do you do once you catch it stab them ?
@knate449 ай бұрын
I was going to ask about wearing a dedicated parrying dagger, because the balance on most of them is not really conducive to carrying on a daily basis. They are often pretty handle heavy which makes them tip over and I was wondering if you had any insight into that
@daniellacalle53878 ай бұрын
Do you mind if I ask when the side ring starts to be seen on swords?
@corneliussulla99639 ай бұрын
Have you ever done a fight scene review of The Last of the Mohicans? I cant find any. Tomahawk+Longhunter knife, would be an interesting topic I think.
@torreyjones44219 ай бұрын
Out of curiosity if you were going to design a bowie knife style one to act as the companion piece to something like the gunther langes messer what features would you want it to have? Would you hold the knife edge forward or even edge backward using the spine rather than thumbing the blade?
@benschwader45379 ай бұрын
I was wondering, because I saw one for sale, how effective a smatchet was in combat?
@AdlerMow9 ай бұрын
What about dagger and shield (lost your sword), or dagger and stick? Are medieval shortswords actually parrying daggers?
@jayred29089 ай бұрын
Parrying dagger. Drop the left hand part.
@drzander33789 ай бұрын
Daggers were also preferred over bucklers in civilian use because they have so many non-combat functions: dining, butchery, woodworking, bushcraft etc. Obviously, a main gauche may not be as effective as tools specifically designed for those other functions, but they will do at a pinch.
@NevisYsbryd9 ай бұрын
Parrying dagger, complex-hilted dagger, etc.
@raphlvlogs2719 ай бұрын
can you use those left handed daggers as utility tools just like bushcraft knives today?
@zarizak39642 ай бұрын
Hello, if I wanted to get a dagger like the one being held in the intro, where would I find one? Is it called something in particular? Just searching parrying dagger or left hand dagger gives me similar results, but nothing as bold as that guard
@vedymin19 ай бұрын
A question...what would be the difference in relying on active defence when wearing chainmail vs plate ? I imagine that in plate you could just walk into many blows and ignore them, besides those from the most powerful weapons. How would that work with mail tho ? Do you fight relying upon it ? Or do you fight as if you don't have it and treat it as insurance if you eff up ?
@ostrowulf8 ай бұрын
I feel fencing dagger may work. I was thinking fighting dagger, but generally daggers are for fighting. However a bollocks dagger or a Rondell dagger are not exactly for fighting a sword.
@gregcampwriter9 ай бұрын
We're not sure, but one thing we know for a certainty was that the motivation was sinister.
@NevisYsbryd9 ай бұрын
Stealth pun
@michaelmorgan99739 ай бұрын
Review of said dagger coming up I hope. I'd like to know the dimensions.