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Medieval skating!

Started by skategeek, October 16, 2018, 01:50:11 PM

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skategeek

A friend of mine from college is in the Society for Creative Anachronism, a medieval re-creation group.  He recently made a pair of bone skates (using deer leg bones), attached them to his handcrafted leather shoes, and tried them out at his local rink.  Check it out!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqxlzanHsWQ

Loops

Awesome!!! I'd love a close up of the blade he made, as well as the shoe. Doesn't look so efficient, but I hope he plans to keep at it and tweaking the design.

skategeek

If you click "Show more" on the video to get the full description, there's a link to a detailed description of the making of the shoes, skates, and pole, with pictures.

LunarSkater

That's cool! Thank you for sharing it.

tstop4me

Quote from: skategeek on October 16, 2018, 01:50:11 PM
A friend of mine from college is in the Society for Creative Anachronism, a medieval re-creation group.  He recently made a pair of bone skates (using deer leg bones), attached them to his handcrafted leather shoes, and tried them out at his local rink.  Check it out!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqxlzanHsWQ
I cringed a bit while watching the video.  The guy propels himself by pushing a spiked pole between his legs.  One slip and fall and .... "Ouch!"

Bill_S

Clockwise skaters do everything a bit differently, don't they?
Bill Schneider

AgnesNitt

Some people will do anything to avoid paying skate rental.

Yes I'm in with the 90's. I have a skating blog. http://icedoesntcare.blogspot.com/

Loops

Quote from: skategeek on October 16, 2018, 11:23:31 PM
If you click "Show more" on the video to get the full description, there's a link to a detailed description of the making of the shoes, skates, and pole, with pictures.

Done- Fantastic!!!!  What a delightful rabbit hole. Thank you for sharing!!!

ChristyRN

I have one friend who is big time into SCA and another that does it too. I doubt either will be trying this. . .
Once in his life, every man is entitled to fall madly in love with one gorgeous redhead.  (Lucille Ball)

Query

Kind of cool. :)

I used to know a few people connected to that group while in College. There is a similar group called the Markland Medieval Mercenary Militia. They love re-creating Medieval clothing, food and activities. E.g., some of the people in those group make their own pseudo-authentic period shoes and boots. I think a lot of the same people go to Renaissance fairs.

I think you should give your friend a short lesson on skating, so he can enjoy his skates more. Make sure he knows that knife edge sharpening doesn't work well, because the blade sinks too deep - you need a fairly flat or slightly concave bottom cross section to glide across the ice. (Or maybe he didn't sharpen the skates at all? That would explain the difficulty.)

Also, using a pushing stick between the legs looks so inefficient! However, I admit this drawing and web page
  http://www.iceskatesmuseum.com/e-historie-1.htm
partially supports that idea.

I refuse to believe bone skates had to be that inefficient. Bone can be sharpened quite well, though it may be the edge was less durable than steel. For that matter, steel was used for weapons quite far back in Scandinavian history, so it is hard to believe it wasn't used for skates fairly early.

LunarSkater

Well, from my (limited) amount of research, metal skates weren't really in use until the middle ages. According to James R. Hines' book History of Figure Skating, "bone skates date back at least three thousand years [...] The earliest known iron skates date from around 200 A.D. They were not sharpened but were strips of iron that functioned in the same manner as bone. The early iron runners may seem to have been an improvement, but they did not replace bone. Peasants would not have had the means of securing iron; bone was free." Skating at this time was used as a means of transportation. It wasn't until the Dutch in the 1300s came out with metal blades with edges that skating was able to truly become more than simple Point A to Point B in winter. Also, Hines mentioned that bone skates weren't sharpened because the fat in the bone itself helped with the glide.

Here's a decent short article explaining the history of skate blades, if you're interested.
https://www.sciencefriday.com/articles/history-ice-skates/

Query

Quote from: LunarSkater on October 24, 2018, 09:31:35 AM
Well, from my (limited) amount of research, metal skates weren't really in use until the middle ages.

But the SCA, that the person mentioned in the original post belongs to, IS concerned with the middle ages! Though admittedly, if the article you cite is correct, not until the late middle ages.

I wonder though if the archaeological evidence is complete. I suspect it, like most archaeology, is based on relative little evidence. E.g., is it possible that in the early middle ages, any iron - or other usable metals - were valuable enough that the used skates would not usually have been thrown away, but their metal would have been reused for other things? So we might just not have a sample. In fact, the early picture was drawn from an old map, not from an archaeological dig.

You don't really need sharp edges or metal to ski or skate (e.g., even now, many skis have no metal, and some speed skaters deburr the edges created by flattening the bottom). What you mostly need are smooth relatively flat surfaces. And that certainly could have been done using bone.

I'm rather bothered by the reconstructed skate that the article you site pictures. It has a ROUND bottom. One of the main things that makes skating (or skiing) efficient is to have an approximately FLAT bottom. But it is only a reconstruction.

Come to think of it, those early map-derived pictures show something that lies a bit like a snow board. (In fact, having just one ski or skate makes a pushing pole much more plausible. Is there any way to use a snow board efficiently when not moving downhill?)

Of course, when it comes right down to it, there isn't all that much difference between a ski and a skate.

Some early pictures and characterizations of "skis" make it clear that people were using two skis, sometimes without poles, long before the middle ages - e.g., see

http://r.search.yahoo.com/_ylt=AwrC1FPAF9JbO0cAkGBXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTByOHZyb21tBGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDBHNlYwNzcg--/RV=2/RE=1540524096/RO=10/RU=http%3a%2f%2fjournals.sfu.ca%2fnr%2findex.php%2fnr%2farticle%2fdownload%2f160%2f154/RK=2/RS=z2SRoaHS9qcUEOZOfKbaaKX5fH8-

That article suggests they may have been using something vaguely akin to the "diagonal stride" technique - somewhat similar to modern skating technique - in Scandanavia - about 4000 to 4500 years ago, based on cave art, though I'm not sure that cave art is really clear enough to support that in a rigorous fashion. (And if they were going up hill, it is hard to believe they wouldn't have evolved something close to modern "herring-bone" technique, which is also somewhat similar to modern skating technique.) It is hard for me to believe they weren't also skating with them in a similar fashion on ice. If they did indeed go back to a mono-skate technique with a single between-the-legs pushing pole, that was backwards progress, in terms of efficiency.

But, since the picture of people skating that way was only from a drawing on an old map, perhaps the depiction of a single ski with a between-the-legs pushing pole was a non-eyewitness idea of how it worked, and maybe it was completely wrong, somewhat like the depictions of various imaginary creatures that appear on many old maps.

Obviously, neither of us are experts on the pre-history of skating. We can't really be sure of the early techniques and equipment, especially on areas where the experts disagree.

But I think we can both agree that the original poster's video doesn't look very efficient, and that few people would have used skates that way if it consumed so much energy. And I bet that if you wished to, you could the SCA skater a few lessons on skating technique, and maybe on shaping and/or sharpening the skate, that would make him much more efficient, and help him to have more fun with his home-made skates. :)