The medieval sword by ewart oakeshott, records of the medieval sword has 57 ratings and 3 reviews endre said. Records Of The Medieval Sword PDF Download.
Contents • • • • • Biography [ ] Ronald Ewart Oakeshott was born in 1916. His uncle wrote and and also had a collection of antique swords and through these the young Oakeshott became interested in swords. After leaving Oakeshott studied at the in London. He worked at the Carlton Studios and at A.E. Johnson Ltd as a commercial artist.
While still being interested in collecting arms and armour, building up a significant collection. At this time in the 1930s and 1940s antique swords could still be picked up cheaply and Oakeshott began collecting them. Because of the scarcity of information about these he began to research them himself. As a trained artist he illustrated most of his own books and also became a speaker on arms and armour.
Oakeshott served in the from 1940 to 1945 on destroyer escort during and was invalided out after being wounded. He returned to A.E. Johnson, Ltd. And served as its director for fifteen years before leaving in 1960 to become a full time researcher and writer, but still finding time to paint marine pictures and other subjects. In 1963 he met the educationist and writer at a dance. He left his wife for her and they became partners for life and married in 1995, after the death of Oakeshott's first wife, Margaret Roberts. In 1964 he was elected a Fellow of the.
He co-founded the in 1948. Oakeshott served as President of the Society in 1951. Also in 1951 Oakeshott published the article 'A Royal Sword in Westminster Abbey' in on the results of his work on the sword of in.
As a result Oakeshott began to be consulted by museums such as the at and private collectors. Oakeshott, who stood at a little over 5 feet tall, bequeathed his personal collection of more than 75 swords to the Oakeshott Institute of Arms and Armour in. Ewart Oakeshott was married twice, firstly to Margaret Roberts. His second wife, the novelist (1913–2005), survived him, along with a son and two daughters from his first marriage. Typology [ ]. Main article: Oakeshott's typology of medieval and early renaissance swords is among his most influential and most lasting works.
Though his work was not entirely original, it was certainly groundbreaking. Jan Peterson had previously developed a typology for swords consisting of twenty-six categories.
Peterson's typology was simplified by Dr. Wheeler in short order to only seven categories (Types I–VII).
This simplified typology was then slightly expanded by Oakeshott by the addition of two transitional types into its current nine categories (Types I–IX). From this basis, Oakeshott began work on his own thirteen-category typology of the medieval sword ranging from Type X to Type XXII. What made Oakeshott's typology unique was that he was one of the first people either within or outside of academia to seriously and systematically consider the shape and function of the blades of European Medieval swords as well as the hilt, which had been the primary criteria of previous scholars. All Gujarati Font Zip File.
His typology traced the functional evolution of European swords over a period of five centuries, starting with the late Iron Age Type X, and took into consideration many factors: the shape of blades in cross section, profile taper, fullering, whether blades were stiff and pointed for thrusting or broad and flexible for cutting, etc. This was a breakthrough. Oakeshott's books also dispelled many popular cliches about Western swords being heavy and clumsy. Definition Of Menu Bar In Microsoft Word more.
He listed the weights and measurements of many swords in his collection which have become the basis for further academic work as well as templates for the creation of high quality modern replicas. List of published works [ ] • The Archaeology of Weapons: Arms and Armour from Prehistory to the Age of Chivalry Boydell Press, 1960. • The Sword in the Age of Chivalry Boydell Press, 1964. • Records of the Medieval Sword Boydell Press, 1991. • European Weapons and Armour: From the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution Boydell Press, 2000. • Sword in Hand Arms & Armor, Inc. • A Knight and His Weapons Dufour Editions 1964, 1997.
• A Knight and His Armor Dufour Editions —, 1999. • A Knight and His Horse Dufour Editions 1962, 1995. • A Knight in Battle Dufour Editions —, 1998. • A Knight and His Castle Dufour Editions 1965, 1996. • Swords of the Viking Age Boydell Press 2002. • The Sword in Anglo-Saxon England Boydell & Brewer 1962.