Postby George Turner » Wed Oct 09, 2002 1:17 pm
There's also the woman's high guard, which might indicate that women were using swords. Once I was struck with the idea that a woman in a beehive hair style would have to perform Vom Dach to the side, or the hilt would snag in her hair. A martial arts class in the 1960's would probably have had to make the same modification. "Men overhead, women to the side..." Anyway, just some idle speculation.
One interesting book I read on a more recent example of women in combat was "Rebels in Blue. The story of Keith and Melinda Blalock". They were the only couple to fight on both sides of the U.S. Civil War, and came from the hills of North Carolina, where certain aspects of the culture were considered backwards even for the 1600's. For example, if you catch a family enemy unawares, squatting near a campfire or something, then God is looking favorably down upon you, and has delivered them into your hands. So you put a rifle bullet through their head. Anyway, it's a fascinating story, and they were both wounded numerous times. I think she ended up as a cavalry officer. Either way, both she and her husband were very efficient killers, often of their southern leaning neighbors, which resulted in a continual stream of post-war lawsuits, which is how their case became so well documented.
We still have parts of this culture alive in Eastern Kentucky, where sometimes a defense of "Everybody knew he needed killing" will sway a grand jury. My aunt's neighbor, who I was vaguely aquainted with, was killed by a homeowner in a dispute over a roofing job. When his mother was asked if she wanted to file a lawsuit she replied, "No, we always knew he needed killin'. Or he was gonna kill somebody."
George Turner
ARMA in KY