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- From: sjb@fc.hp.com (Stuart Bobb)
- Subject: sharp, two-edged swords: Roman period
- Sender: news@fc.hp.com (news daemon)
- Message-ID: <BxtL3s.8sB@fc.hp.com>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 17:40:40 GMT
- Organization: Hewlett-Packard Fort Collins Site
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1.6 PL6]
- Lines: 41
-
- This may not be the right news group for this question, but I suspect it is a
- good place to start.
-
- I'm trying to get a realistic picture about the value and the importance a
- sharp, two-edged sword might have had in Roman times, time period of around
- 110 A.D. No, this isn't an FRP type question, I really have an interest in
- the historical facts (not opinions!) surrounding such a weapon.
-
- Some questions:
-
- I get the idea that during that time period, any sharp sword was probably a
- tall order to manufacture and that making a good two-edged sharp sword was
- probably a very tall order. True? False?
-
- What kind of personage would even command (be allowed to have) such a weapon:
- Any lowly soldier (seems almost certainly not)
- A centurion? (maybe?)
- Who?
-
- What would be the economic value of such a weapon?
- A few days pay for a soldier? (Not likely!)
- A years earnings of a prince (sounds too high!)
- How much in terms that are comparable to today?
-
- Is there some special tactical effectiveness of such a weapon? It seems like
- that being two-edged it might stab/impale much deeper/better than a normal
- sword, but I don't really know.
-
- I should maybe clarify what I mean by imagery. If I say that somebody was
- firing a .44 magnum hand-gun loaded with hollow-points, that conveys a lot of
- things that many people today could immediately relate to. So does the
- phrase "spraying an Uzi into a room".
-
- What I want to understand are the mental pictures that would have been
- attached to wielding a sharp, two-edged sword in the 110 A.D. time period.
-
- If I'm totally in the wrong group, my apology, please direct me to where I am
- most likely to get an historically accurate answer. Thanks.
-
- Stuart Bobb
- sjb@fc.hp.com
-