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134:
495:
27:
216:. These did not supersede the principle of the privately owned equipment; instead, the armouries offered standard equipment at a reduced price to the individual serviceman. Consequently, substantial reserves of arms and armour were accumulated in the armouries of the Swiss cities during the
67:, who imitated Swiss warfare methods during the early 16th century, also used the pike, supplemented by the halberd. The halberd is still the ceremonial weapon of the
204:) which were able to equip the troops of a given city developed only in the more wealthy cities during the 17th and 18th centuries, specifically in Zürich, Bern,
38:
developed a number of characteristic weapons during their period of military activity in the 15th and early 16th centuries, perfected further during the
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520:
173:. A peculiarity of the Swiss armies of this period was the principle of self-equipment: each man was expected to purchase his own
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373:
239:
By contrast, the population of the rural cantons in the conflicts of the Early Modern period was often armed with simple and
19:
This article is about the arms and armour of the Old Swiss
Confederacy (15th to 18th centuries). For the modern period, see
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403:
299:
49:
was the primary weapon of the early Swiss armies in the 14th and early 15th centuries. Later on, the Swiss added the
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224:. These armouries were decommissioned after the dissolution of cantonal military forces with the formation of
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of 1383–84 used medieval types of catapults and battering rams, but for the first time also
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to better repel heavy cavalry and roll over enemy infantry formations, with the halberd,
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The Swiss armies of the late 14th and 15th centuries, used a variety of different
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466:
European weapons and armour: From the
Renaissance to the industrial revolution
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What does the Swiss Guard actually do? – By
Christopher Beam – Slate Magazine
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during the late 15th and the 16th centuries perfected their production of
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Substantial collections of historical arms and armour are kept in the
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Depiction of the clubs carried by the peasants in the 1653 uprising
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177:, either pike, halberd or handgun, as well as his personal
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157:, developing the "national weapons" of the Swiss: the
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Switzerland Arms and Armour (NikosAHF at flickr.com)
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412:Rüstung - Rüstung in der Alten Eidgenossenschaft
16:Military equipment of the Old Swiss Confederacy
102:) had become ubiquitous. Also common were the
261:uprising of 1802, called after the eponymous
379: Anne-Marie Dubler, Fritz Häusler:
82:other than halberds and pikes, such as the
21:List of equipment of the Swiss Armed Forces
230:
132:
25:
86:. By the 15th century, the carrying of
508:
381:Waffen - Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit
114:. The city cantons could also employ
435:Historical Dictionary of Switzerland
404:Historical Dictionary of Switzerland
300:Battles of the Old Swiss Confederacy
61:used for closer combat. The German
13:
265:"club" carried by the insurgents.
181:, and in the 18th century his own
30:Swiss halberd (early 16th century)
14:
557:
472:
493:
361:, 28 July 1968 (Nr. 458), 55–57.
243:weaponry, especially clubs, and
521:Military history of Switzerland
295:Military history of Switzerland
332:
1:
449:, Men-At-Arms Series No. 94,
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355:Alteidgenössische Bewaffnung
7:
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251:. This was the case in the
220:, especially by Zürich and
42:(16th and 17th centuries).
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447:The Swiss at War 1300-1500
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253:Swiss peasant war of 1653
141:of the early 17th century
531:Renaissance-era weapons
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142:
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516:Old Swiss Confederacy
270:Swiss National Museum
234:
165:, and later also the
136:
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546:Western plate armour
536:Early Modern weapons
410: Peter Hug:
130:and early handguns.
541:Early Modern armour
276:in Bern and in the
255:, and again in the
247:such as the spiked
145:The bladesmiths of
40:Early Modern period
272:in Zürich, in the
237:
143:
32:
464:R. E. Oakeshott,
459:978-0-85045-334-8
451:Osprey Publishing
374:978-3-280-01251-2
305:Swiss mercenaries
280:Military Museum.
274:Historical Museum
218:Thirty Years' War
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526:Medieval weapons
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441:Douglas Miller,
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424:
418:
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364:Hugo Schneider,
353:Hugo Schneider,
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226:the modern state
139:footman's armour
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193:, and uniform.
175:personal weapon
124:Burgdorferkrieg
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473:External links
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468:(1980), 44–48.
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443:Gerry Embleton
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432:in the online
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401:in the online
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155:bladed weapons
110:and later the
84:Lucerne hammer
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315:Schützenfest
310:Almain rivet
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258:Stecklikrieg
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249:morning star
240:
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201:
195:
170:
159:Swiss dagger
144:
77:
64:Landsknechte
62:
59:Swiss dagger
44:
33:
500:Switzerland
290:Swiss sword
167:Swiss sabre
163:Swiss degen
149:, Bern and
69:Swiss Guard
510:Categories
321:References
202:Zeughäuser
453:, 1979.,
228:in 1848.
222:Solothurn
198:armouries
196:Central
169:known as
112:arquebuse
88:side arms
57:, or the
55:longsword
368:, 1980,
284:See also
210:Fribourg
137:Typical
108:crossbow
92:baselard
80:polearms
429:Italian
398:Italian
348:Sources
263:Stäckli
206:Lucerne
187:bayonet
179:sidearm
171:Schnepf
128:cannons
122:in the
73:Vatican
71:in the
47:halberd
486:Portal
457:
423:French
417:German
392:French
386:German
372:
241:ad hoc
214:Geneva
183:musket
151:Zürich
106:, the
98:, and
96:dagger
326:Notes
245:maces
191:sabre
147:Basel
100:degen
36:Swiss
455:ISBN
426:and
414:in
395:and
383:in
370:ISBN
212:and
120:Bern
51:pike
45:The
34:The
359:NZZ
104:bow
512::
445:,
420:,
389:,
357:,
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185:,
161:,
118:.
94:,
75:.
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438:.
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200:(
90:(
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