swash-buckler - definitie. Wat is swash-buckler
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Wat (wie) is swash-buckler - definitie

SMALL SHIELD
Votive buckler; Buckler (weapon); Sword and buckler
  • Sword and buckler combat, plate from the ''[[Tacuinum Sanitatis]]'' illustrated in [[Lombardy]], ca. 1390.
  • Irish round shield

swash-buckler      
n.
Bully, braggadocio, swaggerer, blusterer, roisterer, rough, fanfaron, Captain Bobadil.
John Chessell Buckler         
  • Costessey Hall, Norfolk, as rebuilt by Buckler
BRITISH ARCHITECT
J. C. Buckler; J.C. Buckler; JC Buckler; John Chessel Buckler
John Chessell Buckler (8 December 1793 – 10 January 1894) was a British architect, the eldest son of the architect John Buckler. J.
Ben Buckler, New South Wales         
  • Ben Buckler at night
  • Golf course
  • The Ben Buckler coastline
  • Ben Buckler, from the south. The [[Bondi Sewer Vent]] can be seen behind the beach area.
LOCALITY IN EASTERN SYDNEY, NSW, AUSTRALIA
Ben Buckler; Ben Buckler, Sydney
Ben Buckler is an urban locality in the eastern suburbs of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is part of the suburb of North Bondi in the Waverley Council local government area.

Wikipedia

Buckler

A buckler (French bouclier 'shield', from Old French bocle, boucle 'boss') is a small shield, up to 45 cm (up to 18 in) in diameter, gripped in the fist with a central handle behind the boss. While being used in Europe since antiquity, it became more common as a companion weapon in hand-to-hand combat during the Medieval and Renaissance periods. Its size made it poor protection against missile weapons (e.g., arrows) but useful in deflecting the blow of an opponent's weapons, binding his arms, hindering his movements, or punching him.

MS I.33, considered the earliest extant armed-combat manual, (around 1300) contains an early description of a system of combat with buckler and sword.