Jump to content

Lanzalonga

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lanza Longa sometimes also known in Italian as gialda.;[1] modernly known scholarly mostly as lanzalonga,[2][3] the term was also, normally, translated in Tudor period english as Long Spear, was a medieval polearm typical of Italian municipal infantry, a type of spear between 3 and 4.5 meters long[4]

Known as "lanza longa"[5] (long lance) precisely for the minimum length of its rod of at least 3 meters, it served to counter the charges of the enemy cavalry by forming in front of it the forehead of a forest of spikes. The blade was generally leafy - but varied in length, thickness, width - and the rod was round in section. It evolves or is replaced by the even longer pike.

In detail the lanzalonga was specifically an infantry weapon, a spear, typical of northern Italy; the shorter version known as the gialda[6] was more commonly in use in central Italy, particularly in Tuscany, and was, technically, a long lance used by both infantry and cavalry. The later Lanza Longa as was more commonly known in the British islands was a shorter version used for training and in duels and its use was taught by most of the more famous manuals of the period.

Notes and References

[edit]
  1. ^ The latter term usually refers to the longer models of Italian medieval lances.
  2. ^ From medieval Italian meaning long lance or also, indifferently long spear.
  3. ^ https://www.hroarr.com/manuals/fiore/omsg_lanza.pdf
  4. ^ Shorter length models, but at least 2.5 meters long, were used for training or dueling.
  5. ^ In modern standard Italian it would now be written as lancia lunga.
  6. ^ The distinction is specialistic, or find in literary works, and the term commonly used for the weapon is Lanzalonga or, in english, Lanza Longa/Long Spear.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Aldo A. Settia: De re militari. Pratica e teoria nella guerra medievale; Collana: I libri di Viella, 83; Novembre 2008.
  • Fiore dei Liberi; Tommaso Leoni: Fiore de' Liberi's Fior di Battaglia, a full translation of the Getty manuscript. 1st ed. Lulu.com (2009). 2nd ed. Wheaton, IL: Freelance Academy Press (2012).
[edit]