There are a number of 1920s and older 120 and postcard format cameras with rise or rise and shift. Almost none from that era with other movements (tilts or swings). If you get a good bellows or can repair or replace a bad one, have a quality lens in a shutter you can bring up to snuff, these cameras can do anything a 1960 vintage Moskva-5 can do except focus with a rangefinder -- plus the movements.
As Helen suggests, hand holding with rise or rise and shift isn't hard at all. You need a camera with a wire frame finder for best results (these were pretty common prior to 1940 on 6x9 and large formats, almost universal on cameras with movements), because the wire frame automatically compensates for the movements in terms of showing you what part of the scene is actually going on the film. Set up your movements, compose through the wire frame, and trip the shutter -- wind on and all done.
Of course, many of these older cameras were something of a nightmare, ergonomically -- my Voigtlander Rollfilmkamera is pretty easy to hold in portrait format, but quite difficult to hold steady while operating the shutter in landscape, as that puts the shutter release underneath the shutter housing. Still better than the Moskva, though, which is well nigh impossible to hold steady in landscape with its body release...