I don't disagree here either, but the same can be achieved with the edge as well - heck, most of the living lineages we still have from Europe do just that.
And what living lineages would that be?
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I don't disagree here either, but the same can be achieved with the edge as well - heck, most of the living lineages we still have from Europe do just that.
I suppose you mean parrying edge-to-edge when you talk about "blocking with the edge"? Numerous historical manuals from Döbringer to Hutton make it quite clear that parries are to be performed with the edge, but usually don't specify whether against the opponent's edge or his flat.
I suppose you mean parrying edge-to-edge when you talk about "blocking with the edge"? Numerous historical manuals from Döbringer to Hutton make it quite clear that parries are to be performed with the edge, but usually don't specify whether against the opponent's edge or his flat.
Mike Cartier wrote:
And what living lineages would that be?
Jeff Gentry wrote:
IMHO there is no reason with any sword to block edge to edge, even a stop hit you could go to the hilt/hand to stifle the blow.
Jake Norwood wrote:
It so happens that the gross majority of counter-cuts and active verstezen of that type end up having and edge-to-flat relationship. If someone cuts a zornhau at me, and I counter cut indes ("just as," not gleich, or "simultaneously," which would not be a counter-cut at all, but rather a coincidence), then because my blade is just a hair behind my opponent's in time I will strike down upon the flat (or angled in upon the flat) without "trying to." It just happens...simple physics. I am then further advantaged by this because striking down on his flat will more forcefully disrupt his attack by more violently re-directing its momentum (not to mention giving him a nasty wobble). I think that that is part of why the masters make less of a "big deal" of it than we do--because they spent so much time working with steel swords "at speed," it was obvious that the relationship between edge and flat was not something that needs to be sought when doing the techniques properly--it just happens.
John Clements wrote:
*snip* ...and have further demonstrated how every single cut can without damage be closed with and stifled using ricasso against ricasso edges... *snip*
Instead, we are still waiting for actual evidence from Medieval and Renaissance sources for instructions to bash edges together that can’t be interpreted as we properly do them.
But how many of these people have ever struck full force with a sharp-edged cutting blade at another sharp-edged cutting blade to actually experience the near instantaneous traumatic results to edges from such impacts?
Medieval and Renaissance fighting men did not purposely trash their swords and no source from the period instructs that they should.
The historical evidence for this alone is enough on its own (not to mention the same thing appearing in Japanese, Chinese, Indian, and Indonesian swordplay and even some 19th century European teachers still understood and taught it ---the rest, as has been repeated countless times here, only taught a deteriorated ricasso to ricasso defense without any conception of earlier counter-striking deflections).
Right. Meyer sayeth: "turn the true edge against his incoming stroke; now when you have caught his blow on the forte of your true edge, remain hard on his blade, and wind inward and outward to his head." (Translation by Stefan Dieke) 'course, he was likely using a federschwerdt, but that's still an edge-to-edge parry quite clearly described.
I think in actual practice you are talking about the same things we are, but our usage of terms differs.
There is still a lot of debate over how "parry" should be used, but in general I think it's not necessarily the most appropriate term for every possible type of defense involving blade contact. That seems to be confusing our debate somewhat. I tend to consider a parry to be more of a passive stopping action to be followed by a separate offensive action, and many here would agree with me.
It's also been said a couple of times already that we do believe in striking edge-to-flat with countercuts. Since this and stifling are more proactive and under certain circumstances can even function offensively at the same time, we usually label these types of actions separately from parries.
Also, regarding "living lineages," there are a lot of differences between 18th-19th century sources and earlier sources from the Renaissance caused by the changes in culture and technology, and it's not a good idea to try and use the later sources to interpret the earlier ones in this case because the context is too different, so we strenuously avoid those types of arguments.
If you were to bang your edge against the incoming strike the attack might bounce out or stick in the gouge created--a "scoop" prevents both.
Okay, here's another question. If Talhoffer shows a man using a thumb grip on horseback, how did he switch into it with one hand busy with the reins? More importantly, how will he undo it?
I'm not trying to use the later stuff as evidence that edge-to-edge was done earlier, I find the earlier treatises proof enough...
But the earlier treatise example that you cited as evidence was, as Jake said, a very special case of glancing contact designed to scoop.
This lessening of potential forces is very important when heavier swords are delivering two-handed blows from the back & cocked positions, as this makes their impulses, energies, and resulting forces much higher than found in later forms of swordsmanship, forms that emphasize quick blows from very forward initial positions (as in fencing).
Given that the energy in the oncoming sword is a result of the applied force times the distance of application (or applied torque times angle), starting a blow from a forward position makes it very much weaker. Although it arrives slightly sooner, thus establishing its clear superiority in fencing competition, its lack of energy renders it less than effective in combat.
After all, unarmored Olympians go head-to-head with live steel and they don't have a significant injury rate, much less a staggering death rate.
To get back to the point, dead stopping these early hard two-handed blows can badly damage a sharp blade in one move. Yes, you might in an emergency do one in combat, as some masters mentioned, but who would let you do one in practice?
Suppose that back-in-the-day you were John's student in some school of defence, learning to handle sharps. After you both armor up he throws a zornhau at you and you dead-stop it, ruining his foible. How much does he bill you for replacing his sword? How long does it take him to get his replacement? After he's done with you physically and verbally how many of the other students will repeat your technique?
You might say that non-oblique edge-stops can't be taught by a master who values his own steel, and thus their use would be unschooled.
The major issue that ARMA has with "edge parries" is really, honestly, only edge banging. Really. I can't emphasise enough how often and how throuroughly this has been made clear in discussion after discussion after discussion. But, people read what they want to read.
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