Fiore's Sword Axe.
"This sword is equally a sword and an axe. It should not have a sharp edge from the guard up to 6 inches from the point; its point should be sharp and its sharp edge should be about 6 inches in length. The small rondel under the hilt should be able to glide to about 6 inches from the point, but not beyond that. The hilt should be well tempered and sharp, and the pommel nice and heavy. All points must be well tempered and absolutely sharp. The front of the sword should be as heavy as the back; weight should be between *4 and 6 pounds* depending on how tall and strong the man bearing it is."

A weapon that seems to be the invention of Fiore himself, featured in two of his treatises, a weapon that combines longsword and pollaxe.
Has this been illustrated somewhere else than in treatises of Fiore, has a copy of it ever been found, or has it ever been replicated?

What are your theories regarding it?


Hope I'm not overstepping myself by creating another thread so quickly, and I really hope image uploading works from my phone.

Thank you all on beforehand. :)


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Re: Fiore's Sword Axe.
Max Ronnby wrote:
weight should be between *4 and 6 pounds* depending on how tall and strong the man bearing it is.


According to http://www.personal.utulsa.edu/~marc-carlson/history/measure.html an Italian pound is 300-350g, so that would be 1.2kg to 2.1kg (1.2-1.8kg to 1.4-2.1kg, depending on the pound).
Re: Fiore's Sword Axe.
Timo Nieminen wrote:
Max Ronnby wrote:
weight should be between *4 and 6 pounds* depending on how tall and strong the man bearing it is.


According to http://www.personal.utulsa.edu/~marc-carlson/history/measure.html an Italian pound is 300-350g, so that would be 1.2kg to 2.1kg (1.2-1.8kg to 1.4-2.1kg, depending on the pound).



That's not very heavy at all!

In a book by Greg Mele, he says that it should be around 12-15lbs(5.45-6.8 kg)
That sounds... Quite heavy! But Fiore says it should be heavy, and it is quite big.


"This sword is both a sword and an axe. Weighty things can be of great impediment to those that are light. This is also a Posta Di Donna, the noble high guard, who uses her malices to often deceive the other guards: you think I'm attacking with a cut when I'm instead, thrusting. All I have to do is to lift my arms over my head, and I can deliver a good, quick thrust."

Posta Di Donna La Soprana (The guard of the High Lady)



Adding another picture.


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Looks like some kind of boar sword to me, with sharpened pommel and quillons....even has the crossbar behind the sharp point, to stop the boar running up the sword....

Is it possible he was unaware of what a boar sword is/was and got confused? Or was he looking for an alternative use for one, against human foes...?
Julian Reynolds wrote:
Looks like some kind of boar sword to me, with sharpened pommel and quillons....even has the crossbar behind the sharp point, to stop the boar running up the sword....

Is it possible he was unaware of what a boar sword is/was and got confused? Or was he looking for an alternative use for one, against human foes...?



Indeed it looks a bit like one!
I do not think master Fiore was confused, he is considered one of the great masters of fencing, heh.



Another thing to add about the twelve to fifteen pound weight that a friend mentioned, if one calculates that through the Italian pound, it suddenly weighs around as much as a Montante, and then it all seems much more sensible and viable.
More than just a little bit similar.....I'd say identical, particularly the first illustration above....


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Re: Fiore's Sword Axe.
Timo Nieminen wrote:
Max Ronnby wrote:
weight should be between *4 and 6 pounds* depending on how tall and strong the man bearing it is.


According to http://www.personal.utulsa.edu/~marc-carlson/history/measure.html an Italian pound is 300-350g, so that would be 1.2kg to 2.1kg (1.2-1.8kg to 1.4-2.1kg, depending on the pound).

Actually, that translation (Leoni?) seems to have attempted to do the conversion for you. The actual text says it's between 5 and 7 pounds ("E vole esser di peso de .v. a .vii. libre"). Five Medieval Italian pounds at 350g each is 3.8 standard pounds, and seven converts to 5.4 lbs.

So, four to five and a half pounds, a heavy longsword or a light spadone.
Fiore's Sword Axe
This weapon looks kind of unique to me. It looks more like a sword-spear combination rather than sword-axe.
[ Linked Image ]
[ Linked Image ]
Re: Fiore's Sword Axe
Shahril Dzulkifli wrote:
This weapon looks kind of unique to me. It looks more like a sword-spear combination rather than sword-axe.

If you slide the rondel on this sword to the end, it will look pretty close to that one.

[ Linked Image ]
It's sword-axe as in pollaxe.

The spiked crossguard and weighted pommel means it can strike with serious force, hook and trip with the cross, thrust with both ends - all as if it were a pollaxe. Also it can thrust as a sword and be used from the half-sword, so be used to fight as a sword in armour.
Craig Johnson from Arms and Armor made one for Bob Charron, several years ago. It is heavy, ugly, and would tear through armor.
Chris Last wrote:
Craig Johnson from Arms and Armor made one for Bob Charron, several years ago. It is heavy, ugly, and would tear through armor.


you had me at 'would tear through armour.... :eek:

what did he test it on??

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