Hi Martin.
I don't have as much time as I'd like, so I'll answer what I can.
Re: Linear Ringeck
Ringeck, because he's Lichtenauer, is *not* linear. In the Doebringer version of Liechtenauer, it is repeatedly made clear *not* to attack moving straight in, but always moving to the side (as in Meyer's Triangle step). That's something that neither of the current Ringeck books make clear.
I heared roumors that you are somwhat an wiseman on the Meyerfencing!
Wiseman? I'm working on it. I know enough to get in trouble <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" />
One thing I want to put fokus on here in this tread is the differences between the manuals in the Lichtenauer tradition. I´m looking for sub-traditions so to speak!
Every master and manual has its own "flavor," so to speak, but you need more than one to make a tradition. There are differences in approach, priority, and presentation above all. Ultimately the techniques and principles are the same, though some will be stressed more than others. For example, Doebringer's version places a great deal of emphasis on the thrust--more than even Ringeck, I think. Meyer avoids the thrust (though he doesn't omit it, as some want to accuse him of), on account of the use of the longsword in schools being the primary focus of Meyer's longsword text.
I my self is very unexperienced in Meyer, have read the longswordpart, but I find some likness to Talhoffer in the language area. The names of things. Do you find any technic simmilaritys that you only find in Talhoffer and Meyer?
I remember that when I first really got into Meyer I was amazed at how much clearer Talhoffer became right off. Now I'm going to spend a few days looking at Talhoffer for good correlations. Two things, however, stick out to me.
The first is that Talhoffer always seems to be "up." Ochs, Hangen, and all the geschrenckt orts and stuff. Meyer does this, too, through the constant use of the zwerchauw and its variants. OTOH, as I read Doebringer I see the same thing, just less obvious for the lack of illustrations and "set plays."
Second, and more thrilling, is the "Wechselhau" in Talhoffer on Tafel 2 (next to the Sturzhau, another Meyer-common name). While I've seen a hundred conjectures on this, Meyer explains it superficially in his section on the cuts and in detail in the later plays. And it looks just like what Talhoffer is showing.
So yes, I think that there is a great deal in common there that we are still trying to understand.
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director