Ewart Oakeshott

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ewart Oakeshott (25 May 191630 September 2002) was a British illustrator, collector, and amateur historian who wrote prodigiously on medieval arms and armour. He was a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, a Founder Member of the Arms and Armour Society, and the Founder of the Oakeshott Institute. His classification of the medieval sword, the Oakeshott typology, lives on today as the premiere work on the systematic organization of medieval weaponry.

Main article: Oakeshott typology

Oakeshott's typology of medieval and early renaissance swords is among his most influential and most lasting works. The work was not entirely original, nor groundbreaking, however. Dr. Jan Peterson, developed a typology for Viking swords consisting of twenty-six categories. Peterson's typology was simplified by Dr. R.E.M. Wheeler in short order to only seven categories (Type I-VII). This simplified typology was then slightly expanded by Oakeshott by the addition of two transitional types into its current nine categories (Type I-IX). From this basis, Oakeshott began work on his own twelve category typology of the medieval sword ranging from Type X to Type XXII.

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