The First Foot Guards

We are a Revolutionary War reenactment group based in Boston MA,
accurately portraying the royal household regiment that is now known as
The Grenadier Guards

 

The Rapier

Through its long history the rapier has changed its form, but it was a choice of weapon for gentlemen, rather than the military.

The development of this weapon was furthered primarily by the development of the gun.

The adoption of the matchlock and wheellock put and end to the full suit of armor (although it was still used in ceremonial). The knightly harness was now a liability, and with its demise came the decline of weapons designed to combat it: the mace, the war hammer and swords whose efficacy depended as much on percussion as on edge. A lighter, faster blade became both feasible and necessary.

The word "rapier" is thought to have come from a Spanish term, espada ropera or "sword of the robes" or dress sword (associated with civilian rather than military clothing.) Whatever its origin, the term was in common usage by the late 1400s.

The rapier blade was originally broad: usually an inch and a quarter wide, and its hilt still had stout, straight quillons. The necessity of accurately directing the point led swordsmen to slip their forefinger over the quillon for greater control. Soon (probably after numerous untimely losses of the protruding digit!) rings were added to the quillon. Since armored gauntlets were no longer in use, further protection for the hand was needed. The hilt gained a knuckle bow, and curved bars grew out of the quillons and rings of the anneau to enclose the hand in a metal cage. The swept hilt was now fully developed.

In the late 1500s the rapier underwent a subtle alteration. The open space in the rings of the large anneau were often filled in with decorative grillwork or shells - a design known as the Pappenheimer, named after German General Gottfried Heinrich, Graf zu Pappenheim. This weapon often had a rather wide blade, since it evolved partially as a military sword.

By the early 1600s the first cup-hilt rapiers had begun to appear. The swept hilt was replaced by a metal bowl, often 3 to 4 inches deep, inside which was the ricasso, flanked by pas d'âne (a ring-shaped guard). The knuckle bow was preserved, and the quillons became straight and often quite wide. This final form persisted until the early 1700s, especially in the hands of the Spaniards.

The history of warfare shows a constant dynamic between offense and defense. Since armor was no longer a consideration, and the rapier's design allowed for a much wider range of movement, the new competition became one of vying philosophies of defense, or, as the term evolved, "fence."

Initially, the rapier was used like its medieval predecessor: as a cutting weapon. The first important book on rapier technique was the Opera Nova, written in 1536 by Achillio Marozzo of Bologna.The thrust was aimed primarily at the face and was often coupled with a motion that beat one's opponent's attack away. Importantly, defense was achieved by body movement: previously different configurations of shield had been used.

By the 1600s the Italians led in the development of fencing tactics. At first the weapon was used to thrust and cut, but not to parry. The job of fending off a foe's blade fell to the main gauche (left hand) dagger, a weighted cloak, or a gauntlet, the palm of which was often reinforced with mail.

The lunge was developed, which led to a stance that led with the right foot. This side stance, reducing the visible target area, eventually led to the abandonment of the off-hand weapon.

Vincentio Saviolo was the first master to insist on the total superiority of the point, which led to the narrowing of the blade. Since the rapier no longer possessed the weight to cut by percussion, the draw cut was used. In that technique, the blade was placed against the target and rapidly pulled back under pressure, creating a slicing action that often involved a fair length of the overall edge. During that period, it was not uncommon for blades to exceed 40 inches in length.

The art of fence also flourished in Germany, France and Spain, although Italian masters did most of the work that significantly advanced the art of fence and hence the design of the rapier. In England, where a 13th-century law forbade the establishment of schools of fence, and the social status of a fencing instructor was on a par with vagabonds and actors, the atmosphere was less conducive to the advancement of the art.

One of the significant social aspects of the rapier was its status as a "civilian" weapon. Prior to the Renaissance, the sword was a symbol of the knight. With the rise of an affluent merchant class, the sword was now used by the upwardly mobile. Since a gentleman was expected to be capable of defending his honor, the carrying of a weapon was a fashion statement of his professed gentility.

Eventually, the evolution of complex swordplay demanded the lightest, fastest possible weapon. The cup hilt's component parts - the quillons, cup, knucklebow and pas d'âne - all shrank down to the most perfunctory size possible. The blade itself became much shorter, with a deeply indented fuller. The result was the "small sword," a weapon that eclipsed the rapier completely in the 1700s. The smallsword was far easier to accommodate as a fashionable article of clothing, yet was still a formidable gentlemanly weapon with which to repel the attentions of footpads when returning from an evening's revels in Covent Garden.

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Footnote

In the lore of edged weapons, there is a charming story in Sir Walter Scott's "Ivanhoe". In the Crusades, King Richard the Lionheart gets to sup with his enemy, Saladin. After dinner they each extol the efficacy of their weapons. Richard has an iron bar brought. With his massive sword, he easily cleaves the bar. Saladin then throws a cushion in the air and in mid-trajectory cleanly slices it in two. The irony is that the weapons, though effective against warriors of the same kind, are largely ineffective against each other.

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