Stance width in guards?

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Eric Chisler
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Location: Chico, California

Stance width in guards?

Postby Eric Chisler » Wed Apr 16, 2008 11:25 pm

I'm noticing a lot of the later manuals show a much wider stance (i.e. Meyer) than is suggested by many of the earlier fechtbuchs. Which is preferred for proper martial soundness?

-Eric

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Randall Pleasant
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Location: Flower Mound, Texas, USA

Re: Stance width in guards?

Postby Randall Pleasant » Thu Apr 17, 2008 10:07 am

Eric Chisler wrote:I'm noticing a lot of the later manuals show a much wider stance (i.e. Meyer) than is suggested by many of the earlier fechtbuchs. Which is preferred for proper martial soundness?

-Eric


I think the width of the stances were probably the same. It's just that the art work in the fechtbuchs got much better by the Renaissance.
Ran Pleasant

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Jeremiah Backhaus
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Location: West Bend, WI

Postby Jeremiah Backhaus » Fri Apr 18, 2008 8:15 am

Eric,


Keep in mind that Meyer's book is shot "in motion" meaning you are seeing the fighters as they are swinging and stepping. Thus you will see a wider stance. That being said, I try to keep a Meyer-esque stance myself. I find that wider helps me to move further faster (of course I am slow anyway so take this with a salt lick).

If I were you I wouldn't worry so much about width but making sure that you are square to your enemy and can move easily and quickly along the Segno.


-Jeremiah (GFS)

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Ken Dietiker
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Location: Tacoma, WA, USA

Re: Stance width in guards?

Postby Ken Dietiker » Sat Apr 19, 2008 4:37 pm

Eric Chisler wrote:I'm noticing a lot of the later manuals show a much wider stance (i.e. Meyer) than is suggested by many of the earlier fechtbuchs. Which is preferred for proper martial soundness?

-Eric


Even in the Fiore manuals (which are both earlier manuals), in the PD and Morgan it may appear that the stances are relatively narrow by comparison, but if you look at the Getty, they are drawn wider. I personally recommend wider for various reasons.
Ken

-----
"They are ill discoverers that think there is no land,
when they can see nothing but the sea". ~Francis Bacon


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