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    The blog was last updated: July 12, 2010

    Sword Glossary

    Broadsword Term usually stands for Medieval swords which is, in fact, wrong. This misnomer comes from Victorian collectors of the early 19th century.
    Claymore Two-handed broadsword from the 16th century used by the Scotch Highlanders against Englishmen.
    Crossguard Also cross-guard or quillions. The straight bar or guard of a Medieval sword, usually between the hilt and blade.
    Dirk Long, usually single-edged dagger.
    Fullered blade (also called: fuller) A shallow flute in the middle of one or both sides of a blade. Lightens the sword and makes it stronger and somewhat flexible. Swords have none, one, or several fullers.
    Grip The handle of a sword. Mostly made of wire, leather, wood, ivory, bone or horn. Also a method of holding a sword.
    Hilt The lower part of a sword. Consists of a cross-guard, handle/grip, and a pommel. Medieval swords are most likely to have a straight cross or a cruciform hilt.
    Langets Metal strips attached to the the shaft of a polearm to reinforce the torque of its head, and to protect the joint connecting the head and its haft.
    Pommel A variously shaped counterweight to the sword blade, riveted to the end of the sword tang above the grip.
    Quatrefoil An ornamental form which has four lobes or foils. It may resemble a four-petaled flower
    Quillions Special (Renaissance) term for two straight or curved cross-guards (front and back).
    Ricasso The dull part of a blade right above the hilt. Made for fingering.
    Scabbard Sheath for a sword or dagger. Usually made of thin wood, lined with felt or sheepskin, and covered in leather.
    Tang The continuing, hidden part of a blade inside a handle. May be of a different temper than the blade. Sword may have full or partial tangs.
    Temper The degree of harness and elasticity in steel and other metal.

     

    The Highland Claymore

    The claymore is one of the most recognizable swords in history. A uniquely Scottish hand-and-a-half style of sword, first appearing at the beginning of the sixteenth Century, it is almost certainly a development of the Scots-Irish single hand style of sword. Shorter and lighter, in general, than the continental Two-Hander, the average Claymore ran about 55 inches in over all length, with a 13 inch grip and a 42 inch blade. Fairly uniform in style, the sword was set with a wheel pommel often capped by a crescent shaped nut and a guard with straight, down sloping arms ending in quatrefoils and langets running down the center of the blade from the guard. Every able bodied man in the Highlands carried arms, as can be attested to by John Hume in the passage below written on his experience as a prisoner after the battle of Falkirk (1746). "Thy [the Highlanders] always appeared like warriors; as if their arms [weapons] had been limbs and members of their bodies they were never seen without them; they travelled, they attended fairs and markets, nay they went to church with their broadswords and dirks;"

    The most recognized form of the Highland Claymore came into being around the end of the 15th century. Because there are so few original claymores in existence today, most of the information as to style and form comes from burial tombs that depicted the effigy of the buried person with a sword of that period.

    By the end of the sixteenth century it seemed to be reaching the end of its active life and complex development. Although it probably continued in use well into the 17th century, the basket hilt sword was soon to replace it completely.

    Today, the Claymore stands as a great symbol of Scottish heritage.


     

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