A spadroonP. G. W. Annis (1970). Naval Swords, British and American Edged Weapons, 1660–1815, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, p. 38. is a light sword with a straight-edged blade, enabling both cut and thrust attacks. The English term emerged in the early 18th century, although swords of this type were used in Europe from the late 17th century onward. Spadroons were primarily sidearms for military officers and non-commissioned officers (NCOs) in the army and navy during the 17th to early 19th centuries. While prevalent in Europe and America, the term 'spadroon' remains uniquely Anglophone.
The spadroon bridges the design gap between the small-sword—exclusively a thrusting weapon—and the more robust broadsword. Its blade may be either single- or double-edged, coupled with diverse hilts ranging from simple stirrup guards to fully enclosed double-shell guards. A definitive distinction between spadroon and broadsword varies temporally and geographically, but spadroons are typified by swift, agile handling due to reduced blade mass and hilts that allow significant wrist mobility.
Castle (1892) noted:
"A cutting sword of still narrower dimensions, and with a much simpler guard, approximating the small sword, was called 'Spadroon' in England; it paralleled the German cut-and-thrust rapier of the eighteenth century, known as Spadrone."
Nonetheless, terminology differences across Europe complicate direct correlations; German swords of similar style bore generic names like *Degen* or *Hieber*, without the distinct 'spadroon' nomenclature.
French infantry swords, known as *épée du soldat*—broadsword blades with small-sword hilts—bear functional similarity to spadroons and influenced British designs.
From 1680 to 1720, British military swords embraced the spadroon style, characterized by light, often double-edged blades and minimalist hilts. Esteemed masters Donald McBane and Sir William Hope lauded the spadroon as a superior all-around sword.
The 1796 Pattern introduced greater standardization, with a brass double-shell guard and urn pommel. Decorations often replicated those used by Prussian officers.
These swords served officers and NCOs across infantry, artillery, engineering, and naval branches until gradually overtaken by the more robust 1822 regulation sabre.
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