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Monday, February 11, 2019

Medieval Weapons Essay -- European History

chivalrous WeaponsMedieval society, in spite of its stereotypes, was not inherently more violent than modern society. Although on that point was no state in the modern sense, and therefore no touch on of laws that inherently took away the power of the average man or adult female to exercise violence, the violence of the day was considered several(predicate)ly, and with out the inherent sense of ill-doing that accompanies it today. Our understanding of the weapons of the medieval world is skewed by the vast demilitarize of the the civilian that is taken for granted today, yet is a vastly different situation compared to what existed in many parts of the West as olive-sized as seven years ago. Medieval weapons and armor are, for better or for worse, generally considered in light of the knight and the nobility. The nobility, fighting as minatory buck, had exerted a tremendous influence on the battlefield. In spite of the pressures brought to confirm on the knight by the incre ased use of the longbow, crossbow, handgun, and pike, heavy cavalry continued to play an absolutely essential role on the battlefield. The 14th-16th nose candy saw great chanteys in weapons and armor, not because they evolved per se, but because they changed to maintain their forcefulness under deferent conditions, as John Clements puts in his book Medieval Swordsmanship after all, swards did not get sharper, stronger, or especially more effective after the middle Ages. They did not evolve as guns did to become more accurate, of l...

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