I have long been troubled by the unarmored spear plays in Talhoffer's
Königsegg Codex, as in the picture here, et. seq.:
The problem with these plays (and there are only a very few—ff.
45r- 49r in MS XIX.17-3—is that there are a few which show the spears being
used to strike (as in the picture below).
This is the justification a certain well-known but severely misguided HEMA interpreter to apply longsword striking techniques to the spear, which drives
me pretty insane. It just wasn't done
with spears, but a certain sector of the HEMA community just loves the ideas of
taking techniques from one form and applying them to a different form the way Fiore sometimes did. Sigh.
One of the reasons spears weren't used for striking is that
the spears were tapered, as you can see in this (and almost every other) spear
pictured in the Fechtbücher:
I don't want to go too deeply into why they were tapered,
but the short version is that by tapering the shaft you balance the spear
against the weight of the spear head.
The problem with striking with a tapered spear is that they
are therefore thin near the point at which you're striking, and so are
extremely likely to break. And yet,
there are those plates in Talhoffer, mocking what I thought I knew and
understood (and justifying that HEMA fellow in his making up of nonsense
techniques).
Looking at the striking spear plates, I saw that they are
not tapered in the drawing, but it's a mistake to see too much in the bad art
of medieval books, so I didn't want to just claim "But these 'spears' are different!"
And yet, that's what I was thinking—as if they were really
"quarterstaffs with benefits," like the ones in Silver that have iron
caps on the end. “Why not a metal point?”
I asked myself.
Now, however, I think I have the answer, and it also
explains why these "spear" techniques are shown unarmored, and in an
unarmored section of the book (sometimes armored plays are shown out of armor,
but not usually in the armored section of a book): I think they are boar spears.
There is a very short section in “Fechtregeln” (“Cologne
Fechtbuch”) (MS Best.7020 (W*)150), from
c. 1500, which talks about techniques for boar spears. For example, “Item hy na volget eyn stuck ym
swynspeyß.” (“Item: Here follows a technique in the boar spear.” fol. 20v.). The techniques described in the Cologne
Fechtbuch are very vague (text only, too—no pictures), and it’s hard to see any
connection to the spear/staff techniques in Talhoffer, so this is obviously
something of a reach, but it does solve the question rather nicely.
After all, boar spears, if they were tapered at all, were
usually tapered toward the butt, not the point, to make them stronger at the
front end and so that you could push into the thicker part of the shaft for a better
grip in a hard push (with the boar pushing back!). You can see this here:
https://nfknowledge.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/tapestry_two_1.jpg
https://nfknowledge.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/tapestry_two_1.jpg
The term used for the weapon in the Königsegg Fechtbuch is
either “spüß” (which is just “spieß” or spear) or “glän,” a term which is more problematic,
at least for me. The translation in
Wiktenauer gives Glän as “glaive,” but the German word for glaive is “Glefe,”
not “Glän.” The confusion shown regarding this term comes from the fact that Glän is an archaic German word for lance, which took me a long time to track down in a very old German dictionary.
Moreover, while boars were hunted in partial armor sometimes
(Gaston Phoebus talks about wearing leg armor when doing so on foot), that didn’t
apply to commoners, as the picture from Gaston’s book I posted above shows,
which matches with what we see in Talhoffer.
Balanced against this rather complex argument (Occam’s
Razor, anyone?) is the fact that the weapons in Talhoffer don’t look much like
boar spears as they are traditionally depicted, with either a metal cross bar
or a tied-on crossbar of antler to prevent sir swine from crawling up the spear
to gut you. Nor are Talhoffer’s spears
reverse tapered as the boar spears often are.
Still, it’s a fairly crude drawing, so I don’t lend to much weight to
this objection, even though it must be recognized.
I confess, however, that in spite of this weakness, I like
the boar spear idea. It makes sense in a
way in which just claiming spears were used as staves for striking blows does
not, and it answers all the questions (out of armor, striking with the weak
part, etc.) this issue raises. This will
therefore be my working hypothesis for now.
Edited 10/20/19:
Today, as I was reading Andre Paurñfeydt's work, I came across confirmation of my hypothesis. He wrote:
"When your opponent opposes you with a sword or a boar spear, and you only have a messer, then stand down low, (with) the point against him on the right side. When he strikes a buffalo strike from the roof, step into the triangle and displace the strike short, so that he exposes himself." (1515 edition, p. H, tr. Robert Kraaijeveld).
The accompanying picture:
http://wiktenauer.com/images/8/88/Paur%C3%B1feyndt_23.jpg
confirms a high vom Tag guard and the intention of swinging down from above with a Zornhau. Thus, it becomes clear that boar spears were used for heavy strikes, just like a staff, which strongly supports my hypothesis above.
Edited 10/20/19:
Today, as I was reading Andre Paurñfeydt's work, I came across confirmation of my hypothesis. He wrote:
"When your opponent opposes you with a sword or a boar spear, and you only have a messer, then stand down low, (with) the point against him on the right side. When he strikes a buffalo strike from the roof, step into the triangle and displace the strike short, so that he exposes himself." (1515 edition, p. H, tr. Robert Kraaijeveld).
The accompanying picture:
http://wiktenauer.com/images/8/88/Paur%C3%B1feyndt_23.jpg
confirms a high vom Tag guard and the intention of swinging down from above with a Zornhau. Thus, it becomes clear that boar spears were used for heavy strikes, just like a staff, which strongly supports my hypothesis above.
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