In the past year I succumbed to the allure of two of Leo “Tod” Todeschini’s products: a table knife and a baselard. In the late middle ages baselards were big knives with H-shaped hilt hung from the belt between the legs (in barbarous northern countries) or at the right hip (by polite and civilized Italians who had other ways to show they had something long and hard between their legs). He offers two standard models, one which was popular in the Alps and another which was more common in northern Italy and England.

Tod is a brilliant cutler. He captures the essence of knives as objects of lust which you buy and carry against your better judgement. (People in the fourteenth and fifteenth century were not idiots, their coroner’s reports and city statutes show that they knew that when young men start carrying big knives some of them will stab each other with them- and Chaucer always tells you what kinds of knives people are wearing, and whether they are mounted with silver or brass). Tod includes scabbards and suspensions which let you understand knives as accessories not just as something to hang on your wall or leave in your kitchen or your travel chest. The scabbards are painted in a single colour like many originals and lightly tooled like finds from the Thames and the Low Countries. The brass chape is brazed so well that it is hard to see the join (whereas most of the originals Mark Shier has handled are just overlapped or stapled closed). The baselard is beautifully finished, with the nails evenly peened and the wood smoothly set onto the iron core, and has a pleasant substance in the hand thanks to the thick, heavy forte of the blade. The 44 cm length of this baselard is pretty typical (there were a few smaller examples, and many the size of a sword). (Parenthically, his working, table, and kitchen knives would make excellent gifts for a chef or camper in your life). But there is one thing about this knife which is not ideal for me.

There is not much call for stabbing people in my line of work, so I bought this to understand how these moved. I find it very natural to hold this dagger point-up with a finger crooked over the guard, or even lay my finger down the back of the handle like a 19th century infantry sabre. Felix Reich noticed the same thing about the “rather long” grip of his baselard by Tod, and Jean Thibodeau liked holding his baselard by Tod in a handshake grip. As you see, the grip is two fingers longer than my hand. But when I look at art showing baselards in use, I see something very different:

Baselards in art almost always have handles little wider than their wielder’s hands, and are used to stab overhand. The way late medieval Catholics wore their daggers supports this. Its not easy to draw a dagger worn vertically between the legs with the thumb to the crossguard, but it is easy to draw it with the thumb to the pommel. And while its fun to practice switching grips on a knife, I don’t think it happened very often in the circumstances in which these daggers were used given the design of their hilts. (There are other kinds of late medieval daggers, such as cruciform daggers, which encourage a more fluid grip, but when medieval artists show a stabbing the weapon is generally gripped overhand).

There is another piece of evidence. By the fourteenth century, even fairly poor people had access to an aketon, an iron hat, and a pair of gauntlets. And as soon as you put on a pair of late 14th century gauntlets, many grips become much less natural. Your thumb can’t rotate to go along the back of the handle, and its hard to splay your index finger and your middle finger apart. The hard edges of the gauntlets also lock it into the hand once drawn and make it hard to change grips. So I think if you drew a baselard with a gauntleted hand, you would probably stick with ice-pick grip.

I have photos and measurements of five fourteenth- and fifteenth-century baselards to hand: three in Salvatici’s book on the Bargello, X.297 in the Royal Armouries, and W-18 in the Allen collection. Their grips range from 8.5 to 10 cm long, so the handle on this is within the normal range of variation. But I think it is at the wrong end of that range for my hand, especially without gauntlets on, and if I had one sized for my hand I would find myself holding it differently. I think that this grip would suit a medium-to-large hand wearing gauntlets, and I have a small hand.

Historically this was not an issue. If you wanted a new baselard, you visited the botega of someone like Francesco di Marco Datini and he had the boy who slept on the trundle-bed unlock the third strongbox from the left and lay an armful on the table. You would handle them and find one which felt right while he chattered about their many excellent features and tried to judge how much he could take you for. No two would be exactly the same, because sometimes the iron wanted to move this way not that way, and sometimes the bladesmith was bored with double fullers and made this one with three, and sometimes the cutler had an awkward scrap of ivory to use up and asked the bladesmith to give him one with an appropriate handle. Everyone could have a knife which fit their hand and taste, just like everyone who could afford new shoes could have a pair made to their feet. But cutlers today turn frustratingly homogeneous materials into goods to sell by mail order, and their customers pay them for minutes not hours of work on each item (A conservative minimum shop rate for independent artisans is USD 100/hour, about the price of one of Tod’s big knives with scabbard). That drives them to make things as close to identical as possible, and to make choices that sort-of-work for most people rather than being ideal for any.

I think if I had enough money for a custom baselard, I would ask for a hilt 1-2 cm shorter than this one. A dagger like that would be significantly more expensive, but also more educational.

Researchers like Dimicator and collectors like Matt Easton are educating the blade-buying public that short grips are often a feature not something they should ask to have changed, and I hope they succeed. Unless you are quite high-income and skilled at research, the tools you have available are shaped by the blade-buying public and their ideas of what historical weapons were like. Makers who want to stay in business have to strike a balance (warning: YouTube) between what their customers expect, what they are willing to pay, and what their research tells them the originals were like.

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Further Reading:

Edit 2020-01-19: This is also a gender-equality issue! As J.M. Landels points out, a grip which is too big for most men will be actively awkward for most women Teaching Every Body: Adapting your Curriculum for Gender Differences (May 2019). Thanks Guy Windsor for the reference.