>>"edge to edge bashing" means to use the cutting edge of the sword to parry/block an opponents blow. And the opponent is likely doing the same thing to parry blows directed towards him or her.
In American theatre, and movies, they tend to do that a lot as makes a ringing sound when the edges meet....more theatrical an effect it seems.
No doubt it happened a few times historically, simply because under andrenaline and stress, mistakes tend to happen.<<
Ok, this is an old and battered subject, but parrying with the edge is actually historical and can be found explicitly described in sources back to the Bolognese tradition in Manciolino and Marozzo.
That is not to say that all systems parried with the edge or even parried at all, but certainly edge-parrying was normal by the 18thC everywhere in Europe and it can certainly be found in earlier sources. Fiore parries (coverta), whether you use the edge or the flat is up to you IMO, but the cross-guard is shown angled outwards in relation to the opponent's blade.
Anyway, back to topic:
Running a reasonably sized group in London we have had quite a few members come and go who originated from various types of group in the Czech Rep. and Slovakia. It is quite clear, to us anyway, that as has been described above, there is a spectrum of 'WMA' in the former Czechoslovakia. Many of the groups are clearly just reenactors, who know of the sources but don't study them, while others are theatrical stage combat people, who again know of the sources but don't study them. Some of them seem to be from a classical fencing tradition (old Maestro qualifications in foil, epee, sabre), and are now teaching medieval/renaissance weapons in their own system, with reference only to the sources. There really do seem to be a large number of groups in what was Czechoslovakia who make reference to the sources, but what I have found so far is a lack of people actually *studying* the original sources - with the exception maybe of the rapier sources. I have encountered a lot of Czech/Slovaks who seem to think they know what a source teaches because they have looked at the pictures, but then I discover that they have not actually translated or read the words, and so they don't really understand.
Please don't take this as an attack - as a member of HEMAC, a loose coalition of European WMA groups, including some ARMA groups, I *want* to find serious WMA groups in Czech Rep/Slovakia, but so far I have not found any really serious ones (who study the sources). Every year we (HEMAC -
www.hemac.org) run a big event in Dijon in France which has WMA people from all over Europe come, and we'd be very happy to invite serious WMA from the Czech Rep or Slovakia - if you know of such people or groups, please email me at
schola-gladiatoria@hotmail.co.uk and I will do my best to make sure that you are welcomed at our events.
Matt