Medieval people ALL HAD KNIVES!

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  • čas přidán 1. 10. 2022
  • Knives and daggers were carried by everyone in the medieval and Renaissance periods - maybe not all the time, but knives were basically everywhere in almost all situations, and that greatly affects how we should approach the study of period martial arts.
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Komentáře • 427

  • @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight
    @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight Před rokem +440

    Medieval people must’ve been geniuses. They carried around their own eating utensils everywhere they went… which means they solved the plastic waste problem centuries in advance 😉

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 Před rokem

      I mean, they had plastic then. czcams.com/video/5XZr_IJJtas/video.html

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Před rokem +23

      When there had been spoons etc. in medieval Inns, they had been sometimes fixed to table with a chain.

    • @jackrice2770
      @jackrice2770 Před rokem +27

      Given the hit-or-miss hygiene of public eating establishments now, maybe carrying your own utensils isn't such a bad idea. Yeah, I know, you're thinking about 'As Good As It Gets' and Jack Nicholson carrying his own plastic utensils...Okay, so a little OCD can be a good thing. Wait'll you get hepatitis A from a restaurant...btw, that's a fecal-borne disease, so now you know who didn't wash their hands after #2. Maybe your own utensils -and- plate? Never eat out again?

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 Před rokem +8

      @@jackrice2770 On the one hand, that is uncommon (at least in most 'first world' nations), especially if you research or pay attention to the place to not eat from places liable to allow that.
      On the other hand, I used to be a dishwasher myself. On the rare occasions that I eat out, I often get relatively untouched disposable containers and rinse the eating utensils first if I am not using my own. Even if not fecal matter, I find the standards of cleanliness repelling.

    • @alexh4436
      @alexh4436 Před rokem +11

      Could you even do that now? Where I live in NV I cannot carry a knife more than 3 - inches which is hilarious because I can walk down the streets with an AR-15. I can only imagine that there would be lots of places where carrying an eating knife around would be legally questionable. That said it isn't that bad of an idea to consider.

  • @eldorados_lost_searcher
    @eldorados_lost_searcher Před rokem +338

    "He's got a knife!"
    "Of course he has a knife, we all have knives."

  • @edi9892
    @edi9892 Před rokem +156

    I'd like to stress that people have forgotten what items are truly needed to live. In survival, we speak of the 5Cs:
    Cutting: a knife
    Combustion: a fire kit (flint, striker, some tinder)
    Container: a water container, or even better a canteen that can be put into the fire.
    Cover: cloak, great plaide, tarp, etc. (rain protection, sleeping, shelter)
    Cordage: for instance, if you want to tie some sticks together for a fireplace, or improvise a shelter
    These items were carried by people for millennia!
    Medieval people often had even more items as every day carry. Here some examples:
    staff: probably not just as a walking aid and tool of defence, but also to test the ground in case of swamps, or lose stones
    comb: especially when travelling, washing is not that easy, but hygiene is important
    a mug, or bowl: yes, people were bringing their own bowl when they wanted a serving (at least in some conditions)

    • @motagrad2836
      @motagrad2836 Před rokem +14

      Cordage could be a pack strap like a tumpline, a bit of cord used as a belt like monks wear, points for holding leggings to one's undergarment or armour to an arming doublet, laces for shirts or shoes, and so on.
      When I would go hunting (modern gun deer) extra long shoelaces were shortened in a pinch, but everyone at least carried bailer twine if not a thin rope (besides a hunting knife, and maybe a pocket knife as well). We may carry our supplies out in a five gallon pail, as then you also have a makeshift still, but the kit often included a blaze orange plastic rain poncho. The things you mention are still common today for people in more outdoorsy fields/jobs (always carry water on the tractor, always carry a jackknife, dress in layers, etc, if a farmer)

    • @ProfessorShnacktime
      @ProfessorShnacktime Před rokem +11

      Bring back medieval EDC

    • @TrueFork
      @TrueFork Před rokem +1

      don't forget your spoon!

    • @edi9892
      @edi9892 Před rokem +2

      @@TrueFork Indeed! BTW, I've seen IRL that such a blunt object can do considerable damage! In school, our Biology teacher went to get something and a girl picked up a glass rod and rammed it into a cow's heart, which the teacher had just put onto her table before!
      She was definitely the silent water type of girl. Not the typical thug, or punk...

    • @Tennouseijin
      @Tennouseijin Před rokem +3

      I wonder why more people don't wear e.g. a Swiss knife at all times. I see how for very poor people the price may be a deterrent, but for everyone else? It just comes in handy, when you need to cut something, tighten a screw, open a can or bottle, etc. etc.
      It's hard for me to imagine someone who wouldn't benefit from having one. Unless they just carry dedicated tools, of course.
      As for rope... well, there's been quite a few times I regretted not having some rope or duct tape on me. Like when a shoe or a backpack buckle broke on a tourist trip, and I didn't have anything to make a temporary fix, which made it much harder to keep up with the rest of the group. Every time I told myself I should start including some rope and duct tape into my everyday carry.
      I also started carrying a folding cup. There's been too many situations where I come to a party, and have to ask for a glass, because all the clean ones at the table have already been taken... not to mention when I do get a glass, oftentimes someone else would later take it thinking it was unused.
      Other than that, well, a USB charger, cables and a power bank are a modern 'must have at all times'. A flashlight (yes, a phone can do that too, but this drains the battery quickly, so I prefer having a separate one), and some rain protection - for me a fisherman hat is the preferred option.
      Also, I see many people starting to include pepper spray in their EDC. Seems reasonable, especially considering how likely it is now to run into aggressive dogs and their aggressive owners... but personally, I would prefer to just wear some armor. If something attacks me, I may not have enough time to pull out a spray, but I should have enough time to put something hard between myself and the aggressor. And with modern materials, EDC armor doesn't have to be heavy.

  • @sststr
    @sststr Před rokem +118

    Holy cow! An actually short video from Matt!! *boggle* WHO ARE YOU AND WHAT HAVE YOU DONE WITH THE REAL MATT EASTON?!

    • @patrickselden5747
      @patrickselden5747 Před rokem +1

      😂😂😂

    • @alexgrover1456
      @alexgrover1456 Před rokem

      🤣

    • @Neverwas_one
      @Neverwas_one Před rokem +1

      He should get on the CZcams shorts game they are great.

    • @sststr
      @sststr Před rokem +5

      @@Neverwas_one Two minutes is already shockingly short for Matt, I don't think he can get under 1 minute...

    • @sassort
      @sassort Před rokem

      In other videos he has a topic for which he has to establish a context, and that takes long. This time he only established the context.

  • @jamaisj
    @jamaisj Před rokem +26

    Grew up in a small town; I'm used to everyone carrying a knife, anything from a basic Swiss Army knife (3") to a utility knife (8'+). It was actually weird when I was in a city, where almost no one carried even a pen knife.

    • @beowulfsrevenge4369
      @beowulfsrevenge4369 Před rokem +3

      I think I've carried a pocket knife of some sort since I was about 7 or 8. About the time a kid becomes responsible enough to have one. Baring places you are not allowed to carry one of course.
      There really useful things to have, even one as small as a pen knife.

    • @thekingofcats27
      @thekingofcats27 Před 2 měsíci

      Who is carrying an 8 foot knife for utility? That seems highly impractical

  • @TheEudaemonicPlague
    @TheEudaemonicPlague Před rokem +55

    Ever since my grandfather bought me a knife when I was a kid, I've nearly always had a knife on me. It's always struck me as a bit odd that most people seem to never have even the smallest blade. These days, even if I don't have a simple knife, I'll have my Leatherman Wave, which has two blades. I've completely lost count of the times that I've had to pull it out to help someone who needed a tool--usually a knife was what they needed. I can't afford a sword, but I've lost track of how many knives I own...I need to get organized.

    • @kevinfogle7929
      @kevinfogle7929 Před rokem +10

      Most people carry a pocket knife around here. Occasionally I'll run into someone who doesn't and I wonder how they function as an adult on a day to day basis.

    • @bigredwolf6
      @bigredwolf6 Před rokem +1

      There’s plenty places to sell your knives until you can afford a sword

    • @thegreyghost2789
      @thegreyghost2789 Před rokem +7

      If they needed to cut something, people today would take out their phone and look for an app.

    • @swedneck
      @swedneck Před rokem +7

      It really sucks that in many places it is literally illegal to carry any sort of knife, here in sweden for example you need a specific reason for carrying a knife and police could absolutely just say that your reason isn't valid and take your knife and slap you with a fine.

    • @kevinfogle7929
      @kevinfogle7929 Před rokem +2

      @@swedneck that's crazy.

  • @tomk3478
    @tomk3478 Před rokem +106

    "Imagine a world where literally everyone...is carrying a knife."
    We call that rural America, thank you very much. 🤣

    • @bellakaldera3305
      @bellakaldera3305 Před rokem +9

      I always do...

    • @cyrusbjerke8693
      @cyrusbjerke8693 Před rokem +13

      I've had a knife on me since I was 5 years old.

    • @Confused_surprise
      @Confused_surprise Před rokem +17

      he said "knives" not "portable anti-tank artillery", you naughty american often can't make the difference XD
      (this comment was made by an european)

    • @defaultytuser
      @defaultytuser Před rokem +11

      I think you misspelled Rural Argentina ?
      When my relatives come from the city they often ask "how often do you actually use that thing, lol?" and after two or three days they go "ok , now I get it". A week later... they all be carrying 20" blades everywhere 😁

    • @sirallenrider8796
      @sirallenrider8796 Před rokem +19

      @@Confused_surprise Why not carry both?

  •  Před rokem +91

    I would very much like to hear more about those _medieval folding knives_ .

    • @InSanic13
      @InSanic13 Před rokem +18

      Tod Cutler makes a few reproductions of them. From the descriptions he gives on his site, it seems they were very simple designs without a locking mechanism; instead, you might have a tab on the back on the blade that you can use to manually hold it open.

    • @zoukatron
      @zoukatron Před rokem +15

      I have a very nice mediaeval folding knife from Tod Cutler. It is, indeed, very simple, with a long thumb tab attached to the blade to hold it in place when it has been unfolded. The tab sticks out awkwardly when it is folded away, but it is still effective

    • @Lurklen
      @Lurklen Před rokem +8

      I know I'd love to see more of them. I remember discovering them some time ago now, and just thinking they were so neat and unexpected. Not something I imagined in the medieval era, though I don't know why, they had a lot of more intricate mechanical stuff than a folding knife.

    • @ianmcdowell740
      @ianmcdowell740 Před rokem +7

      Japan is still very fond of those style of knives. Simple and sturdy, usually with a brass or sheet iron handle.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 Před rokem +8

      Friction folders were ubiquitous. As others have mentioned, they generally lacked any sort of locking mechanism, either to close or remain open, and instead often had a tab extending from the blade that was held down. Period shaving razors were often folding knives, much as in the modern day, although their blades were usually a standard straight blade rather than the concave shape popular now.

  • @OllihuAkbar
    @OllihuAkbar Před rokem +38

    Europe in the Medieval period sounds like Finland 70 years ago, or just Ostrobothnia today. A strikingly similar looking twin knife set is still pretty common in some parts here, at least in traditional costumes.

    • @atom8248
      @atom8248 Před rokem +3

      My dad is finnish, people would apparently be afraid of finns here in sweden because the stereotype was that they all carried knives

    • @PalleRasmussen
      @PalleRasmussen Před rokem +1

      I grew up with a folding knife in my pocket. Only recently, due to laws, did I stop.

    • @ronhites4629
      @ronhites4629 Před rokem +1

      @@atom8248 Wow, that explains a lot, because I do have Finnish blood, and I constantly go nowhere without a blade, most likely more than one!🗡

    • @redactedcanceledcensored6890
  • @chrisball3778
    @chrisball3778 Před rokem +30

    There was an interesting Cambridge University study based on coroner's records into medieval crime published a few years ago that produced a map of murders in medieval London. I posted about it before, but it never appeared on this thread for some reason. In that study knives or daggers were by far the most common weapons used in homicides, and represented over 55% of all the killings, which were significantly more common per capita than today. Anyway, it's out there if you want to look for it and it's really fascinating.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk Před rokem +5

      Yeah there's a reason lots of places ban knife carrying now.
      Possibly also why chopsticks were big in China. Cut down on eating with knives, cut down on quarrels that turn deadly.

    • @hawkshadowoseanacy5171
      @hawkshadowoseanacy5171 Před rokem

      But today guns cause crime, not knives...
      Oh, wait, knives cause crime once guns are banned (to stop crime).
      It's sorta like crime will happen and criminals will use whatever comes to hand. It's too bad that lawful uses of these tools to prevent crime and protect life aren't ever reported. When I'm older I sure as heck will want an low power multishot rifle if I'm attacked by someone. Besides grenades or maybe vehicles, stuff that is likely to hurt others not otherwise involved, the firearm is about the only defensive tool that takes away a strength, speed, dexterity advantage and allows a defender to overcome those critical advantages needed for almost any other weapon. (crosbow? Maybe but with one shot only, it's not quite the same, and reloading definitely has advantages for those more fit)

    • @hawkshadowoseanacy5171
      @hawkshadowoseanacy5171 Před rokem

      @@mindstalk Didn't they also develop many unharmed combat techniques? I guess no one ever attacked anyone else just with hand or feet or rocks or branches.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk Před rokem

      @@hawkshadowoseanacy5171 It's about ease of killing. It's very easy to kill someone with just a knife and even no training. With lots of knives, or guns, around, if someone gets drunk and/or angry and feels like attacking someone, that easily becomes lethal. Not so much if all you have are fists and chopsticks.
      (Or fists and tables knives, per a video I saw last night, which claimed Cardinal Richelieu encouraged blunt table knives to cut down on the risks of angry fights or sudden assassination.)

    • @chrisball3778
      @chrisball3778 Před rokem +1

      @@hawkshadowoseanacy5171 I don't really think there's much commonality between medieval street crime and modern street crime other than some of both were motivated by robbery. The per capita murder rate in the medieval study was much higher than that in modern London, despite the higher proportion of people carrying weapons for self-defence in the past.
      Obviously, everybody should have a right to self-defence, and I wish you well in trying out weapons and martial arts, but please try to remember that you probably won't need either unless you actively seek out trouble... and we'll all be happier if we don't do that.

  • @toddellner5283
    @toddellner5283 Před rokem +8

    Serious martial arts have ALWAYS been about using the weapons likely to be available in the time and place they were created. Knives are the most common and useful tool we have every created. Sometimes the only thing you have is your empty hands, but that's never the first choice.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk Před rokem

      I think the idea is less that you have a knife to use, and more that the person you're fighting has a knife to use. Changes the context of self-defense.

    • @toddellner5283
      @toddellner5283 Před rokem

      @@mindstalk Ah. The martial arts I study *assume* the other guys are armed.

    • @gameragodzilla
      @gameragodzilla Před rokem +1

      This is why I, as a Chinese-American, always considered gun fighting a martial art. Guns are the best weapons available, but they do still need training and practice to be effective. And the process of learning techniques for fighting is the very essence of martial arts.

  • @jackkardic5151
    @jackkardic5151 Před rokem +17

    I live in rural America. I don't need to imagine that context.

    • @KJamesMellick
      @KJamesMellick Před rokem

      Yeah, even small cities it is really common.

    • @guarddog318
      @guarddog318 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, same here.
      I was given a pocket knife when I was 6 or 7. Nothing fancy, just an old Barlow-type thing with a 2-1/2 or 3 inch blade.
      I've had at least one knife of some kind on me every day since then.
      Sometimes they're the small folding type, sometimes they're rather large and fixed blade.
      It's always boggled my mind when someone occasionally asks "What do you want that for? What are you gonna do with it?"
      Sorry folks, but if I have to explain it to you, you'll never understand. * shrug *
      ( Honestly, I think a better question would be how people get along WITHOUT a knife of some kind with them. )

    • @willek1335
      @willek1335 Před rokem +4

      Rural anywhere I think. Even countries where it's technically illegal, based on laws made by urban people, people of the hinterland will just get on with their lives.

    • @robo5013
      @robo5013 Před rokem

      @@guarddog318 Always carried at least a pocket knife as well, even in school (70's & 80's.) Teacher told one classmate that he would get points taken off his paper because he ripped it out of a spiral notebook and the frayed edge looked unprofessional, no one (including the teacher) batted an eye when I took out my knife and cut off the edge of his paper for him. They aren't weapons, they're tools. If I had wanted to stab somebody in school during a heated exchange it would would have been faster and easier to use the pen or pencil that was always in hand vs saying, "hold on, wait a minute," while I fished the knife out of my pocket and opened it up expecting the other kid to just stand there. No one has any common sense anymore.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 Před rokem +1

      @@guarddog318 Highly specialized urban environments where daily tasks do not require pocket knives and eating is often done with disposable implements. Much of our modern cuisine does not particularly require a knife on account of how it is prepared and thus use spoons, forks, or the hands instead as well.

  • @M4TCH3SM4L0N3
    @M4TCH3SM4L0N3 Před rokem +10

    I feel like this video may literally be the absolute shortest that Matt has ever produced... EVER. I'm baffled.

  • @harrykouwen1426
    @harrykouwen1426 Před rokem +10

    It has been very common to have a pocket knife as tool for all trades since very young age, I still have a folding knife in my pocket as a tool, as a sailor and engineer later on shore, I had a bigger knife as a tool on me but was tought how to use it for selfdefence by an old farmer when I was 10 years and got a Herder folding knife, excellent knife for skinning apples, cutting ropes, as a screwdriver, cleaning nails, stripping paint or isolation from electric wire, and as deterrent against bad people looking for a fight, and of course many knife games. An old sailor taught me besides using them for rope and knott making, lots more possibilities with daggers or buckknives (the locking type) to be able to defend or repell, wearing them was very common among sailors in the 80's and 90's mainly as tool, life saver even.

    • @Thenoobestgirl
      @Thenoobestgirl Před rokem

      Damn... That's hardcore

    • @philw8049
      @philw8049 Před rokem +1

      Everyone should at least carry a pocket knife. I do and use it every single day (and quite often so do other people), boggles my mind that people actually choose to not have this invaluable and easily carried tool.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Před rokem +1

      If you want to go well armed, become a gardener. Knives, big one for cutting turf, an old butchers knife, folding saws, axes, forks, sheep shears, hoes various and spades.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Před rokem

      @@philw8049 you didn't grow up in Glasgow I'm guessing. Back in the 70s knifes and swords were popular.

  • @blxtothis
    @blxtothis Před rokem +2

    Being born in 1949, myself and all of my friends grew up with knives and all carried them until our teen years. The Boy Scout knife I inherited from my pop had a tool for extracting stones from a horse’s hoof being from his youthful days when things like that were useful everyday tools.

  • @truntbeefwell9784
    @truntbeefwell9784 Před rokem +5

    And when it is said that everybody had a knife, it actually means EVERYBODY did. Analysis of Norse graves in Denmark shows that children as young as four was buried with their knives. They most likely had chores to do from the age when they were old enough to do so, and thus needed knifes (cutting saplings for animal feed, basket weaving, gathering birch barch for tinder and other uses,e tc)

    • @TrueFork
      @TrueFork Před rokem +3

      check Bruegel the Elder's "Peasant Wedding", there's a little girl with a striking feathered hat in the foreground, she has a knife dangling from her belt (it looks like the sheath is worn and the blade is sticking through)

  • @fyrerider521
    @fyrerider521 Před rokem +5

    1:12 "also known as a prick" Filed away for YTP usage immediately after naming a person

    • @garrettparks7439
      @garrettparks7439 Před rokem

      I’ve also heard it called an uke (pronounced ook). But no chance of double entendre with that, so not as fun.

  • @Muritaipet
    @Muritaipet Před rokem +1

    Well done sir, I'd never thought of that. Knowing that everyone is armed significantly changes how I think about medieval "hand to hand" fights and brawls

  • @SibylleLeon
    @SibylleLeon Před rokem +7

    Matt Easton: From zero to context in 1:50 minutes xD

  • @michaelsmith8028
    @michaelsmith8028 Před rokem +21

    A friend once told me that since they used to eat with knives more than forks it would be like someone walking around with a fork all day long.

    • @NM-wd7kx
      @NM-wd7kx Před rokem +4

      I believe forks weren't actually introduced to Western Europe until the latter Middle Ages

    • @michaelsmith8028
      @michaelsmith8028 Před rokem +10

      @@NM-wd7kx They were introduced in the early middle ages, but not adopted. They were seen as more of a gimmick that "Byzantine" diplomats would bring with them.

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Před rokem +6

      @@NM-wd7kx : As far a i, german, know, church was for a long time agaist using a fork for eating, because a fork is the tool / sign of devil.

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Před rokem

      @@kdolo1887 : I read this sometimes ago. But of course i don' t know, if this is true. But: Today eating forks have mostly four spikes ( similar to Mistgabel/ pitchfork?), while devils fork, like Heugabel/ hay fork is shown mostly with three spikes.

    • @wolfvonversweber1109
      @wolfvonversweber1109 Před rokem +5

      @@brittakriep2938 That's a myth. Food just was prepared differently, with grain stews and already cut meat a fork isn't that usefull. Think of many asian meals made to be eaten with sticks. They had bigger forks to cut meat if I remember correctly.
      Bread only became staple side dish in the late middle ages.
      They weren't afraid of forks. There were cultural and technical reason why they weren't adopted at the time, that make sense in their context, if we don't look at it from the way we prepare and eat our food >today

  • @inregionecaecorum
    @inregionecaecorum Před rokem +2

    Judging from the latest news in Coventry last night just about everybody in certain parts of town carries a knife with them too, and uses them for affray. I used to carry my own eating implements with me, a basic KFS, but stopped because the knife could be construed as an illegal blade, now I tend to carry wooden cutlery. I am sure that in the medieval period a peasant would have used his knife amongst other things to carve a spoon.

  • @hurnn1543
    @hurnn1543 Před rokem +4

    One of my favorite Fiore plays ends with "and stab them with your dagger" the dagger that is literally never mentioned elsewhere in the play. Because 15th century Italy, of course you had a knife on you.

  • @bergamot4832
    @bergamot4832 Před rokem +5

    we dont need to go back to medieval times, even in the youth days of my grandfather, everybody (even the kids aged ~7) used to carry knives

  • @aetherial87
    @aetherial87 Před rokem +7

    And here I thought it was ridiculous that most civilians in the Elder Scrolls games seem to carry daggers. Interesting factoid!

    • @ianwinter514
      @ianwinter514 Před rokem +9

      considering how much you tend to flood the market with iron daggers it boggles my mind that not everyone has at least 6 of them

    • @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis
      @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis Před rokem +2

      The elder scrolls could profit somuch if they'ld work together with people like Matt or Todd.

    • @davehahn8767
      @davehahn8767 Před rokem +1

      Elder Scrolls! Blast from the past! Loved that game, still have an old copy that runs in a DOS box. Dagger and/or a staff

  • @Keyboardwarrior1337
    @Keyboardwarrior1337 Před rokem +9

    Hey mate. I've been watching for a few years now and I just wanted to thank you for all your work on this channel. I've been very entertained.

  • @sushanalone
    @sushanalone Před rokem +2

    Babies had knives coming out of mum in Medieval Europe!
    Then they just cut the umbilical cord and walked away hunting Deer!

  • @glynnmitchell9253
    @glynnmitchell9253 Před rokem +14

    I watched this twice as I thought to myself that my internet service must have dropped the stream. I have Never known Matt to make a short video or take the shortest path to say anything. I’m still feeling a little dizzy... thinking “there must be a mistake here”.
    Seriously, I enjoy your videos. If you have finally run out of material (which I seriously doubt), I ordered a stiletto from Tod and I would love to hear methodology of use and demonstration of capabilities of this small dagger. I don’t buy the ever present dibble about this being only an assassin’s weapon and strictly an offensive weapon. The dagger seems fairly common and it makes no sense to say they were all owned by assassins. Nor does it make since to plan an attack, choosing the place and time, and then selecting this weapon over others available to an assassin. Your research and input would be most welcome.

    • @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis
      @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis Před rokem +1

      Look up his recent videos regarding the fairburn sykes dagger and the techniques for using it. Should be transferable to a stiletto

    • @bigredwolf6
      @bigredwolf6 Před rokem

      I mean… a short video for a short answer?

  • @adwarfsittingonagiantsshoulder

    Short video, but a great one. Straight to the point... of the knife... ;-)

  • @bellakaldera3305
    @bellakaldera3305 Před rokem +3

    From the "Lion in Winter", "Of course he has a knife, this is the 14th century and we are barbarians...We ALL have knives!"

  • @mr_mayhem2297
    @mr_mayhem2297 Před rokem +1

    A Matt Easton video that's under 20 minutes long?
    The final scroll has been opened, I can hear the trumpets sounding.

  • @fdsdh1
    @fdsdh1 Před rokem +5

    In the 50's, 60's and 70's my grandpa used to go around Brittany looking for labourers and he said you always needed a knife, he remembers one chap who had no cutlery at all except for one old looking Opinel. It's probably different now, but it's crazy to think there were people basically living like that so recently.

  • @Kyle-sr6jm
    @Kyle-sr6jm Před rokem +2

    Kyle
    1 second ago
    As a Texan, I find it funny you would even consider that they wouldn't carry a knife.
    Hell, here we all carry something sharp or loud.

  • @Dscampbell1286
    @Dscampbell1286 Před rokem +2

    As usual another excellent video

  • @Jurassic_Fart
    @Jurassic_Fart Před rokem +5

    I always keep that thang on me, you know

  • @Jabbawokeez4
    @Jabbawokeez4 Před rokem +4

    yet you carry a small folding knife in you pocket and modern city people are like "ERMYGAWD HE'S GOTR A WEAPOJNS!!!"

    • @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis
      @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis Před rokem

      if you are polite about it and just explain why you always carry a knife, most will understand and even consider doing so themselves.

    • @Jabbawokeez4
      @Jabbawokeez4 Před rokem +2

      @@derstoffausdemderjoghurtis not in the leftest leaning city in already left leaning Canada you don't.

  • @ibalrog
    @ibalrog Před rokem

    To quote an old (unarmed) martial arts instructor friend: "whenever things get a little too static in class, i slip the smallest person in the room a magic marker."

  • @kennymonty8206
    @kennymonty8206 Před rokem +3

    It's sort of shocking to me that this is news to anyone. But, good. There it is, then.

  • @dashcammer4322
    @dashcammer4322 Před rokem +2

    I think everyone I know carries a knife nearly all the time - as well they should. Many of them also carry a gun. Here's the funny thing - it's not legal here in my US state to carry a concealed knife with a blade longer than 3.5 inches (8.9 cm), though we can open carry edged or blunt weapons of any size. We can, additionally, legally carry concealed pistols, as well as carry them openly.

    • @mikelazure7462
      @mikelazure7462 Před rokem +1

      The world is full of weirdness. You can open carry a sword or mace in your state!? You should advertise this fact - could get a whole bunch of medieval re-enactors wanting to migrate to your state so they can live their dream all day every day. In my country, Aus, the coppers got the pollies to write laws banning the carrying of most knives, even folding blades. Not because most of us were stabbing each other, nope, just because a few gang members cut each other up a few times with knives. Lazy law making. As a lifetime knife buff it pissed me off. Lucky for me - the law says we can carry a knife if it is for work or appropriate for our recreation at the time, like a filleting knife if you are fishing. My job requires a knife for some problem solving so I always carry a little Opinel no 6, I need sharp and light not strong. Makes me feel warm, having that tiny little sliver of sharpness down the bottom of one pocket. OK, so maybe there is some weirdness in MY part of the world as well.

  • @Robban.D.Jonsson.
    @Robban.D.Jonsson. Před rokem +1

    You need to make an episode on medieval folding knives.

  • @stormiewutzke4190
    @stormiewutzke4190 Před rokem +4

    As someone who has had a lifelong interest in knives this is a subject that I am very interested in. It's taken me to the point of making my own knives. I view them primarily as tools but weapons technically are tools and when it comes to self defense they would be effective. I am hoping that you will produce some sort of knife fighting information at some point. A book or a video series would be awesome. If you are worried about how it would effect your channel you could do something that is not connected behind a pay wall. For that matter as someone in the United States where it is much harder to find any sort of HEMA classes I would love to have access to some sort of online class and introduction to the subject. I have been following you for 10 years and you are the best information out there with both a good knowledge base and teaching style.
    I have been dealing with an injury for several months and it delayed my work. I am finally getting back to my knives and should have some Bowie's done soon. I will send you pictures and see if it's something that you are interested in. If so maybe I can pick up some steel and toss one together for you after I get my other orders caught up.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Před rokem

      You've come to the point of making points seems to be your 👉

    • @inregionecaecorum
      @inregionecaecorum Před rokem

      Tod has a lot to answer for with his rondel dagger video, got me to making a pirate cutlass from an old machete blade now, not the best of blades but otherwise it was just rusting in my shed.

  • @Username18981
    @Username18981 Před rokem +3

    Was not familiar with a bollock dagger, googled it, not disappointed 😆

    • @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis
      @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis Před rokem

      Matt from schoolagladiatoria and Todd from todds workshop have great videos on the bollock dagger!

  • @mattlambert3118
    @mattlambert3118 Před 18 dny

    Everyone should still always carry a knife. It's one of the most universally useful items a person could carry and you're basically helpless without one. The only reason anyone with any sense would ever go anywhere without a knife is if they knew they could easily get a knife at the place they're going if they need one. The only places I don't at least carry pocket knife are placer like courthouses where you're not allowed to.

  • @edgaraquino2324
    @edgaraquino2324 Před rokem

    Very interesting video, thanks! Perhaps you can a video on folders in the medieval period...didn't know they existed...

  • @GeFlixes
    @GeFlixes Před rokem

    That reminds me of a video of a Enlgishman here on YT I saw a few days ago. As a youth he moved to the US. At the first day at his new high school he pulled out his knive to peel an apple, 10 minutes later he was in hand cuffs with policemen standing over him. He only found out later that this was because of the knive he pulled, which he carried since grade school back in Britain without any problems.

    • @connorperrett9559
      @connorperrett9559 Před rokem

      LOL you'd expect it to be the opposite! It likely depends heavily on the state. In Alabama you can carry folding knives on school campuses. In Utah I think you can even carry concealed handguns in schools if you have a permit.

  • @jollygoodfellow3957
    @jollygoodfellow3957 Před rokem +8

    Grappling is a whole other ball game when knives are present. All these people saying Brazilian Jiu Jitsu is the best art because of grappling don't understand why people didn't typically roll on the ground in medieval battlefields.

  • @breandan3280
    @breandan3280 Před rokem

    Love the shirt!

  • @frost8077
    @frost8077 Před rokem +1

    I didn't know folding knives were that old. I never even thought about looking up how old they really were. I even found images of ancient Austrian folding knives and Roman eating multi-tools, which makes me wonder now how many far older folding tools were lost to time.

  • @brianknezevich9894
    @brianknezevich9894 Před rokem

    For this entire series, taking this as part of the analysis of Tod's Rondel dagger...
    I've been waiting to joke about knives and food.
    Unfortunately, I'm not exactly sure what to joke about, now..
    But it would be funny having a tongue in cheek mock serious lecture by Matt about the relative merits of different martial blades in a culinary sense...
    I bet a 1796 light cavalry sabre cuts a mean sandwich, and the tip might be usable as a spoon, in a pinch! What is the perfect blade for roasting a hare over an open fire?!

  • @deejin25
    @deejin25 Před rokem +6

    Its a really good thing to know. For example today many people prefer ground grappling, while back then it increased your chances of getting stabbed (still does BTW). In any self defense situation or challenge even a common person had a knife so you first sought to get out of range draw your weapon and look for the possibility of people who might intervene to help you or the enemy.

  • @hannespj603
    @hannespj603 Před rokem

    Short and pointy.
    ... and one of the few videos (on this channel) that did not require a convenience break on my side.

  • @bopeton
    @bopeton Před rokem +5

    A British guy's mind being blown by everyone being armed is kind of adorable. I don't think I've been out in public without a weapon since I became an adult, barring airplanes.

  • @paweszymonjasinski7158

    I'm not going anywhere without knife ever.

  • @krokogator
    @krokogator Před rokem +2

    The average medieval eating knife, as far as I know, was short and had no protection against the hand slipping onto the blade. So, it was not like everybody was wearing a dagger, but according to Fairbairn the average medieval knife would have been long enough for most targets.

    • @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis
      @derstoffausdemderjoghurtis Před rokem +2

      while you're right it doesnt really matter in the broader scale. You just cant approach someone the same way in a combat situation, that has a knife, regardless of how usefull that knive is for fighting.

  • @trystanfranziskus
    @trystanfranziskus Před měsícem

    funny enough in my country everyone who would attack you has a knife but you're not allowed to carry a knife specifically for self defense

  • @promiscuous675
    @promiscuous675 Před rokem

    Thank you..

  • @BrentDelong1253
    @BrentDelong1253 Před rokem

    Everyone should carry a knife. One of the most valuable tool on the planet.

  • @MartinGreywolf
    @MartinGreywolf Před rokem

    I don't think it's that everyone had a knife - go anywhere rural even today, and vast majority of people will still have knives. It's that the knives were 1) worn openly on the belt and therefore far easier to access, and 2) they were fixed blade, so they could be made ready far quicker than most folding knives. Especially since medieval folding knives were both rare and without quick-open springs in them.
    It also bears mentioning that there were three knife categories, eating knife, fighting knife and utility knife, and while utility and fighting were sometimes merged, eating knife was always separate. It's the utility knife practically no one went without, while fighting and especially eating knives were sometimes left behind.

  • @TheAleatoriorandom
    @TheAleatoriorandom Před rokem +7

    And to be honest everyone in current times has a bunch of those at home. The main difference its not carriying them in the streets of other public spaces, wich admitedly its a pretty big difference. Still, makes sense to assume that anyone who expected or initiates a figth could potentially, at the very least, carry some sort of dangerous enough kitchen/utility knife.

    • @jamielondon6436
      @jamielondon6436 Před rokem

      Even a pocket knife, though the collapsible blade makes a huge difference, of course.

    • @Yellow.1844
      @Yellow.1844 Před rokem

      man youre really smart, didnt know people have knives at home!

  • @chabis
    @chabis Před rokem +3

    Swiss people still often have a knife. A folding knife. I also often have a plastic eating knife on me since I often buy take away food and it either comes with cutlery or I have some left from the last meal I bought. Does not work too well for self defense, though.

    • @edi9892
      @edi9892 Před rokem

      I grew up in Munich, Germany, and the quarter I lived in had even pre-t33ns running around with fixed blades, or big folding knives... Needless to say, we had a LOT of knife violence.

    • @chabis
      @chabis Před rokem +2

      @@edi9892 Knife violence in Switzerland does not seem to be a big issue. Maybe because the Swiss Army knife is, unlike it's English name may suggest, really bad as a fighting knife. It's a pocket knife.

    • @edi9892
      @edi9892 Před rokem

      @@chabis Basel and Zuri have seen some bad cases in recent times though. Still, I feel safer here, then in Germany...

    • @chabis
      @chabis Před rokem

      @@edi9892 True. It's not like knife crime would not exist and of course in my youth lots of people my age tried to be cool kids owning one of the illegal knifes. But the number of people carrying utility knives does not correlate to knife crime. The number of people carrying fighting knives probably does, though.

  • @dusty7264
    @dusty7264 Před rokem

    Growing up on a ranch in Arizona I always have a pocket knife with me. Back in the day we carried them to grade school and everywhere. I still carry one today

  • @user-im9ov9ud7m
    @user-im9ov9ud7m Před rokem

    Knives and Paper Towels,,, gotta have them.!

  • @Deleteyourself83
    @Deleteyourself83 Před rokem +1

    "Medieval people ALL HAD KNIVES", oh, kinda like all the inner city teenagers and young adults in the UK

  • @Lucius1958
    @Lucius1958 Před rokem

    I was hoping you'd include that clip from Kate Hepburn in "The Lion in Winter"; but alas...🤣

  • @vopserenterprises9703
    @vopserenterprises9703 Před rokem +2

    Sir, please share a video for 'The Special Hilt of Sword For Maximum Brutality' which showing in bollywood movie Tanhaji: The Unsung Warrior for udaybhan singh rathore character in final battle scene.. Please create and share video on that swords history and who use that type of sword? #Tanhaji #Udaybhansinghrathore #India #scholagladiatoria

  • @tiberiusvindex804
    @tiberiusvindex804 Před rokem +6

    I've long believed that the best time period to compare the Medieval/Renaissance to with regards to martial arts would be the Old West in America. Back then everyone had a gun or knife on them, so it meant one had to be quite brave to insult someone lest you end up with a bullet or blade in you for it. Even though towns tried to limit the carrying of weapons in practice most people just concealed their weapons so it was highly likely that most of the people you would pass in the streets or meet in a saloon or gambling hall in Dodge City or Virginia City were packing some kind of weapon and took the proper precautions.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Před rokem

      Why insult them when you could come up behind and shoot them with your shotgun. Pistols were fancy, shotguns were tools. Also the homocide rate was terrible. It still is. 5 times the rate of Western Europe and even 2 x Albania which has more mafia than government.
      But I suppose people might be slower to call me names and hurt my feelings.
      Usa has the social development of 14 y o boys.

    • @DurzoBlint178
      @DurzoBlint178 Před rokem +2

      we need to return to this...#BringBackDueling

  • @ironanvil1
    @ironanvil1 Před rokem

    Unarmed combat in the medieval era, would be more for "recreational" violence, when you want to have a brawl, but not get outlawed for sticking a knife in someone's gut.

  • @RupertFoulmouth
    @RupertFoulmouth Před rokem +1

    Can I imagine it? Yeah, i live in Tennessee. The majority of folks i know carry a knife and or gun.

  • @evanmorris1178
    @evanmorris1178 Před rokem

    Glad to see a few “Lion in Winter” references. Matt, you should have cut in the clip. It would have been lovely. Btw, I never leave the house without at least two knives on me. When working ( as a fabricator ) I often have 3. That’s why there’s a whole class of knives called EDC! That slightly bewildered tone you had was sooo Modern British. You folks have to take your balls back from your government.

  • @alterangel
    @alterangel Před rokem +1

    I live in Montana. I walk around knowing everyone has a gun on them

  • @tileux
    @tileux Před rokem

    The saxons are named after the knife all male saxons carried - the seax.

  • @alexandernewman9735
    @alexandernewman9735 Před rokem

    My father gave me my first pocket knife when I was seven, same year he taught me to shoot. Gave me a nice multitool when I turned twelve that I still carry to this day on my kit as a para.
    We only need knife, fire, and string to live. Might as well carry them.

  • @richardmcginnis5344
    @richardmcginnis5344 Před rokem

    i carry a few knives everywhere every day, i made a shoulder rig for my counter tac 1 from cold steel- its one of the seki city ones not the taiwan i carry a boot knife in my boot and a regular pocket knife then there is the monkey fist keyring with the one inch steel ball in it with the puma game warden in the modified pepper spray sheath as a handle

  • @BCSchmerker
    @BCSchmerker Před rokem

    +scholagladiatoria *The Middle Ages were fundamentally different from contemporary practice, as the knife was carried everywhere on a person.* The peasant's butcher knife was direct ancestor of the _Kriegsmeſſer,_ a single-edged sword; and ballock daggers, due to slim guards integrated into the handle, didn't interfere too much with the flesh of a typical supper.

  • @joejoelesh1197
    @joejoelesh1197 Před rokem +1

    oh you Europeans, bless your hearts. Americans (excepting the Canadians) still have to assume everyone is armed. it informs our daily living not just our interpretation of History

  • @1971irvin
    @1971irvin Před rokem

    Nice t-shirt... 🤘😁✌️

  • @bigredwolf6
    @bigredwolf6 Před rokem

    Imagine a world where the government REQUIRED you to own a weapon

  • @TheOakleysworld
    @TheOakleysworld Před rokem +1

    Matt, I think you only uploaded a small part of this video...it says 2 minutes??? And I've never seen a video on this channel that short

  • @hawkshadowoseanacy5171

    Tooooo short! This is a good topic, please add more. How did this affect crime?

  • @benjaminwright5936
    @benjaminwright5936 Před rokem +1

    Matt, thanks for the video. Follow up question. What kind of knives did soldiers carry on campaign. In role playing games and movies we often see people using their daggers or even their swords to accomplish work tasks. This doesn't feel like good edge care. Besides an eating knife it feels like they must of carried some sort of moderately sized working knife as well. Is this the case?

  • @BelRigh
    @BelRigh Před rokem

    the Skein Dubh (sp?) was a backup eating and killing Dagger.....

  • @glynnmitchell9253
    @glynnmitchell9253 Před rokem +1

    Sorry, I didn’t notice that someone else commented on this being a short video. Can you do a video explaining how the Italians used that eating set to eat spaghetti?
    Just kidding

    • @Murdo2112
      @Murdo2112 Před rokem

      They probably used Bolognese sources.

  • @redactedcanceledcensored6890

    I wonder what is known about utility knives. That eating set is specialized for eating, you would need something more hefty with a fatter handle for a medieval guy's daily tasks, like say a seax. Or was the seax more of a weapon thatn a tool?

  • @RevoReal
    @RevoReal Před rokem

    The art of shaking is as old as something can be.

  • @markfergerson2145
    @markfergerson2145 Před rokem

    All right, this calls for an examination of historical accounts of what kinds of fights people expected to get into and how they were handled. I don't expect newspaper accounts from 1458 or anything but obviously not everyone is going to be equally competent at fisticuffs or knife fighting, so there must have been at least informal rules for escalation and consequences for breaking those rules.
    I mean, personally I'd prefer not to have to stick someone with my eating knife but in a pinch...

    • @dashcammer4322
      @dashcammer4322 Před rokem

      A land without weapons is a a land ruled by young, strong males, or gangs thereof.

  • @barrysmith1202
    @barrysmith1202 Před rokem

    right; crazy, how not even 1% of kendo training, competition, involve, or even acknowledge, the samurai tanto

  • @jlworrad
    @jlworrad Před rokem

    I work in an inner city pub and I break out in a cold sweat to think what pubs were like back then. That mix of booze and blades on belts…

  • @the_westonyoung
    @the_westonyoung Před rokem

    Hey there! I was watching your video on the Easton 3 Sabre and noted you said you prefer not to have a back strap and that John Musgrave Waite recommended not as well. Why is that? Have you made a video on this?

  • @arnijulian6241
    @arnijulian6241 Před rokem

    Been a while since I saw 'Pare & prick'.
    Nice little set matt!
    How much that set you back?

    • @dashcammer4322
      @dashcammer4322 Před rokem

      About 90 GBP but is also comes with a nice brass spoon. Made in Oxford.

    • @arnijulian6241
      @arnijulian6241 Před rokem

      @@dashcammer4322 Wouldn't happen to know the firm by any chance?

  • @julianshepherd2038
    @julianshepherd2038 Před rokem

    In the 1970s we boy scouts all walked about with sheath knifes on our waist at camp.
    Nobody was seriously stabbed and it was the 1970s so boys were expected to take risks.
    Better dead than duffers I think was the idea.
    Mental.
    One of the lads did stab someone to death about 6 years after leaving although the dead guy had pulled a knife on the ex scout so you can't blame him. Self defence.

  • @RobG001
    @RobG001 Před rokem +1

    Bloody hell, only 2min long, did Matt suffer a stroke or heart attack or something? is he ok? :)

  • @user-ft1xf8wk9m
    @user-ft1xf8wk9m Před 3 měsíci

    thanks !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @nowthenzen
    @nowthenzen Před rokem +2

    if everyone did martial arts with eating knives is Matt saying Medieval people were all cannibals?

  • @neutralfellow9736
    @neutralfellow9736 Před rokem +10

    Everyone having a knife frankly makes nearly all hand to hand martial arts utterly useless, even as a concept.
    Even ringen/wrestling/disarms/etc. is only applicable here because you would also have a knife in the fight.

  • @VicSage1836
    @VicSage1836 Před rokem

    I live in Texas. Since so many of us have guns, knives are not really considered weapons. Obviously they can be used as weapons, but we really just consider them to be tools. Very few types of knives are illegal to carry, and most people have at least a pocket knife on them. I usually have a fixed blade, a folding knife, a lighter and a multi tool on me. This is completely normal in my part of the world.

    • @InSanic13
      @InSanic13 Před rokem

      There *used* to be more restrictions on knives on Texas, but that was changed in 2017.

    • @kevinfogle7929
      @kevinfogle7929 Před rokem

      I was going to say something very similar.

  • @ricardobimblesticks1489

    All that has really changed is where we use them.
    We no longer need to carry one everywhere. If the majority of medieval people had access to a vast array of foods, at a moments notice that didn't require a knife; or the ability to 'rent' a serviceable knife at the point of issue of meals that did require one then I doubt they would carry one everywhere either.
    Fewer people carrying knives everywhere leads to less need to defend your life every five minutes, from 'That Guy' and their fragile ego. :-)

  • @tomturbuckle0076
    @tomturbuckle0076 Před rokem

    Matt, we all know how well versed in older knives but how much of your time do you spend with modern knives? Like Civi or Benchmade?

  • @ChumblesMumbles
    @ChumblesMumbles Před rokem

    Let's review my scholagladiatoria bingo card: "context" - check. "prick" - didn't have that one, need to add it. "penetration" and "treatises" are both shockingly absent, am I on the right channel? No rant about helmets either, but it's only a 2 minute vid.

  • @Tareltonlives
    @Tareltonlives Před rokem

    And in every culture and continent.

  • @_JackNapier
    @_JackNapier Před 3 měsíci +1

    It is Official.
    A British man holding a Dagger while speaking is just as proficient as a Southern US man holding a double barrel shotgun🃏🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @ryangardner8873
    @ryangardner8873 Před rokem

    a "little" eating or steak knife is just as long as a Fairbairn-Sykes. so, yeah.