This article is part of The Historical Journal, 2002-09, Vol.45 (3). It details the changes in defending one's honor and masculinity, how such changes are rooted in societal changes, and how this affected conventional dueling practices. The paper explores how dueling with swords changed to pistols and how new conventions reduced mortality.
The Historical Journal is published by Cambridge University Press. Its goal is to publish thirty-five articles and communications annually about British, European, and World history since the 1400s. The journal also aims to analyze recent literature regarding historical sources.
Call Number: E-Journal: Edinburgh Research Archive
Publication Date: 2018
This journal is a collection of textual analysis of historical sources. It explores social politics in Medieval and Renaissance Europe that led to the prevalence of duels during this period. There is a translation of the Italian manuscript "De Arte Gladiatoria Dimicandi," a commentary on dagger-fighting and a training guide for rapier swords.
This review was published by the University of Edinburgh as part of a PHD evaluation.
Call Number: Podcast: Spotify, Apple Music, Podbean, TuneIn etc.
Publication Date: 2020-current
This podcast is hosted by renowned swordsman Guy Windsor. He interviews specialists in respective sword-related fields, including well-known experts and instructors. Current Episodes have covered historical combat, fencing tips, how to run a club, types of swords, swords in fiction, swords in stage combat, how women have impacted the art of swordcraft, historic armour, military combat, how swords were used in different cultures, and much more. It is available for free on all podcast streaming services, and additional content and merch are available at https://www.patreon.com/theswordguy.