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RayMcCullough wrote:Where do you find illustrations with vom tag resting on the shoulder? Would your sword ever be at rest in a fight?
Alex Bourdas wrote:RayMcCullough wrote:Where do you find illustrations with vom tag resting on the shoulder? Would your sword ever be at rest in a fight?
The Von Danzig fightbook shows a sword at the shoulder. Perhaps resting is not the best word, but what I mean here is that the Von Danzig fechtbuch has the sword on, or next to the shoulder, as opposed to above the shoulder and next the head.
Cooper Braun wrote:Stacy, the first two pages you posted are from Vadi. As an Italian master, none of his guards are Vom Tag. The top right picture on the first page is Posta di Falcon (Guard of the Falcon). The top left picture in the second page is Posta di Vera Finestra (Guard of the True Window), which is similar to Fiore's Posta de Donna (Guard of the Woman). Both have similarities with Vom Tag, but neither are actually Vom Tag.
Alex Bourdas wrote:Von Danzig says:
"This guard is called Vom Tag and is performed as follows: stand with your left foot in front and hold the sword either at the right shoulder or with arms stretched high above your head." (26r)
This is my translation into English of Dierk Hagedorn's translation into modern German.
This implies support for the illustration he uses, but the wording is ambiguous enough that it could be interpreted either way.
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