http://www.littletongov.org/museum/even ... asp?ID=153
And on December 10, 2009, Prof. Forgeng will be lecturing. Apparently you can only buy the tickets at the museum and they've got about 60% of the available seats left.
The Sword as Icon and Artifact - Denver/Boulder
The Sword as Icon and Artifact - Denver/Boulder
"Success consists of getting up just one more time than you fall."
It was a good lecture and I enjoyed it. It was fascinating to see many of these swords up close and be able to make out the details on some of them. Things that stuck with me:
-Incredibly small handles. I don't think I could have held some of those swords because my hands are too big. And I don't have particularly large hands.
-The way sword design goes from a thick spine to a thin spine as materials technology moves from bronze to iron/steel.
-The lightness of the swords. Again, the vast majority of the swords on display are just incredibly light. I'll have to take Prof. Forgeng's word that the weight distributions make them handle better than 90% of the available recreations of comparable weights.
-The universal appeal of the sword. The scadians and WMA enthusiasts I saw made up about 1/5th of the audience. The remainder were just folks who love the sword and varied in age from retirees to teenagers.
The museum will be hosting a demonstration of Medieval and Renaissance hand to hand combat on January 16th at 1pm. The Rocky Mountain Historical Swordplay Guild will be presenting the material.
-Incredibly small handles. I don't think I could have held some of those swords because my hands are too big. And I don't have particularly large hands.
-The way sword design goes from a thick spine to a thin spine as materials technology moves from bronze to iron/steel.
-The lightness of the swords. Again, the vast majority of the swords on display are just incredibly light. I'll have to take Prof. Forgeng's word that the weight distributions make them handle better than 90% of the available recreations of comparable weights.
-The universal appeal of the sword. The scadians and WMA enthusiasts I saw made up about 1/5th of the audience. The remainder were just folks who love the sword and varied in age from retirees to teenagers.
The museum will be hosting a demonstration of Medieval and Renaissance hand to hand combat on January 16th at 1pm. The Rocky Mountain Historical Swordplay Guild will be presenting the material.
"Success consists of getting up just one more time than you fall."
