Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet (written in the early 1590s, set in Verona) opens with two characters entering the stage with "swords and bucklers". Later in the same scene a fight breaks out, and the patriarch of the Capulet family calls for his "long sword".
Does anyone know why Shakespeare would choose those types of weapons? What kind of swords would he have meant? I assume he wouldn't meant the same by "long sword" as we do by "longsword" today. Do we know how much he knew about swordsmanship etc.?
Any insight would be appreciated.






