Postby philippewillaume » Thu Feb 16, 2006 6:30 am
Hello
Jeremy, I was not really trying to pick apart what you were saying. I just you’re your example to explain what I was meant.
For me if it does not work practically, it is not historical this is as simple as that.
It seems that I am bound to get it from both sides, people who are using manual complain when I says that an interpretation is not practical or just does not work (ie there is something we do not understandquiteyet).
And people who have a more hands on approach complain that I stick to the manual.
I do not agree with david’s interpretation because I find it too narrow in term of practical application but I can not say it is either incorrect or impractical.
What he does works in certain situation (not enough situations for my taste or if you want I think the concept is applicable to a small range of situation but that’s me).
AS you said it what VD says but Ringeck does not and it is Ringeck that I follow.
Hence my position
As far as putting it to the test, that is precisely what I do and that precisely because of sparring that I have come to the conclusion that I have reached so far.
In fact it is sparing that pushed me in to look in the manuals (after I looked if there was a fencing group close to where I live). The problem I had was that against someone less experienced or less physically gifted you would win with a comfortable margin ( i.e. a fair amount of clean kill) but if the difference of level get narrower double kill or finger of the dead kill started to become a fair proportion of the hit) so I looked for system and method to prevent that to happen.
I spar with people from other organization/groups and one of my regular partners is (until recently firmly) in the camp of the multi sources/natural fighting style and made every attempt to find gaps in what I was doing. That does not prove that what I am doing is inherently better than a multi-manual approach, it just mean we are trying to be as thorough as we can and that we consider sparing an integral part of the study.
Of course I would love to spare/train with, you the more people you train with the more you can refine your findings.
I just cannot fathom why you seem to assume that if I am right you necessarily are wrong or why a hands on approach has to be opposed to and intellectual approach. The way you do thing and the way I do things are not mutually exclusive.
I have stated several time that I though what Arma is doing as historically accurate as my single manual approach.
Ie we have the same amount of bread to cover you are using several jam jar and use only one.
My point was if you do the move you describe it couldn’t be a Zornhau because you are loosing the purpose of the strike. Ie from a Zorh you will have a set of consequences and it is to create that set of consequences that you are using the Zhorn.
If I think the way you do it, is working or not, has nothing to do with it. In fact a similar concept is covered with the abzetsen against the master using a Crump but that is not the point. Basically if you can not hit him either with the strike or as you finish the piece with the thrust (which is just an extension of the hands low or high according is he is strong or weak at the end of the stike) you are not doing a Zornh.
One Ringeck to bring them all In the Land of Windsor where phlip phlop live.