Apologies. My last name is Couch. As a point of interest and genealogy, the name is originally Flemish.
Anyway, Stacy, thanks for the names of those two gentlemen. I'll look for their manuals and see what there is. As I said before, all of these principles and movements, I have already learned or experienced as a result of my Asian martial training. It gives me a greater sense of legitimacy, for lack of a better word, to know that my European ancestors had codified the same concepts that their Asian counterparts had and that having studied the one, I have basically studied the other.
Stacy, if you have more modern translation of these texts or complete electronic versions of them, I would appreciate copies, or direction in finding them for myself.
Thanks.
Stacy Clifford wrote:I think these two quotes say it very nicely:
"Further you shall also know that although I have assigned to every posture its particular devices, it is not my intention that these devices shall not be executed or take place from other postures. The chiefest reason that I have assigned some devices to one posture, others to another, is so they can be discussed in an orderly fashion. Also these devices are not so set in stone that they cannot be changed in practice-they are merely examples from which everyone may seek, derive, and learn devices according to his opportunity, and may arrange and change them as suits him. For as we are not all of a single nature, so we also cannot all have a single style in combat; yet all must nonetheless arise and be derived from a single basis."
-Joachim Meyer, 1570
"Whereupon being forced, through a certaine honest desire which I beare to helpe others, I gave my selfe wholy to the contemplation thereof: hoping that at the length, I shoulde finde out the true principles and groundes of this Arte, and reduce the confused and infinite number of blowes into a compendious summe and certaine order: The which principles being but fewe, and therefore easie to be knowen and borne away, without doubt in small time, and little travaile, will open a most large entrance to the understanding of all that which is contained in this Arte. Neither was I in this frustrate at all of my expectation: For in conclusion after much deliberation, I have found out this Arte, from the which onely dependeth the knowledge of all that which a man may performe with a weapon in his hand, and not onely with those weapons which are found out in these our dayes, but also with those that shall be invented in time to come: Considering this Arte is grounded upon Offence and Defence, both the which are practiced in the straight and circuler lynes, for that a man may not otherwise either strike or defend."
-Giacomo di Grassi, 1570 (from the 1594 English translation)