More on 11th century scabbards

For those of us who wish to talk about the many styles and facets of recreating Medieval armed combat.
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Glaukos the Athenian
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More on 11th century scabbards

Post by Glaukos the Athenian »

Glaukos the Athenian
Squire to Sir Guy Lestrange

Benedictus dominus Deus meus, qui docet manus meas ad proelium, et digitos meos ad bellum.
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bairdec
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Post by bairdec »

Okay, got a question here. How do you figure out where the loops holding the scabbard go so that the sword isn't flopping around at odd angles? Closer together will cause the scabbard to be more vertical, but most depictions seem to have the loops about a hands breadth apart. I was playing with a short scabbard (~12" long) for a sword, but when I had the loops a hands breadth apart the sword hung about 30deg from the horizontal and the whole setup felt really floppy.
Sometimes you have fun, and sometimes the fun has you. -Sgt. Schlock
Gerhard von Liebau
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Post by Gerhard von Liebau »

That's a real pretty scabbard. He's definitely got a lot of sources going his way on that, but I don't see any that are *definitely* designed like a frog. It's still all speculation. But the quality of the research he's done merits his trying to do that, methinks. Perhaps you've found your winner, Glaukos!

Oh, for artistic representations from this era, I highly suggest you buy David Nicolle's Arms & Armour of the Crusading Era 1050-13050. Well worth the while if you don't already have it.

-Gerhard
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