Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
Stewart Sackett wrote:In all the manuals I have read I don’t believe I’ve noted any stances or postures specifically related to boxing. That is to say that, although there are strikes & defenses against strikes, no strikes or defenses seem to come from recognizable boxing stances but rather from wrestling postures. There seems in fact to be a complete absence of boxing from the time of the fall of Rome to the rise of bare-knuckled pugilism (significantly after the medieval period)...If not: what is the general opinion of the practice of integrating techniques into Ringen that, although functional, are not present in or implied by the manuals.
Jeffrey Hull wrote:I have just finished an extensive article addressing precisely that, but that is all I want to say presently. I hope to reveal the article soon.
If others have thoughts about this fine question posed by SS, then please let us know what you think.
Stewart Sackett wrote:
I’m not entirely surprised by this as a bias in favor of grappling seems to me to be quite sensible in a period when opponents may well be wearing armour. I was therefore surprised to note that at approximately 1 minute & 27 seconds into this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfuMYqfmACM a man is seen to shadow box with the camera.
Stewart Sackett wrote:Jeffrey Hull wrote:I have just finished an extensive article addressing precisely that, but that is all I want to say presently. I hope to reveal the article soon.
If others have thoughts about this fine question posed by SS, then please let us know what you think.
Just to clarify:
Are you saying you’ve written an article about the role of striking & strike defense in Ringen or that you’ve written an article about the role of modern techniques in the practice of reconstructed historical fighting arts?
Either way I’d love to read it.
MaartenSFS wrote:One interesting thing is that the one punching does not guard with the off hand.
MaartenSFS wrote:I agree with what you say in that it seems ridiculous now, but, and I am still researching this matter, I think that at that time people didn't even focus on punching, more of an entry or supplementary strike. They would try to get close and take them down and finish them on the ground, perhaps. But when we are trying to recreate a functional self defense system we must also, of course, take into consideration modern methods of attack in order to be able to defend against them.
Stewart Sackett wrote:MaartenSFS wrote:One interesting thing is that the one punching does not guard with the off hand.
This is exactly what I meant by “no strikes or defenses seem to come from recognizable boxing stances but rather from wrestling postures”. For a modern boxer (& one could even guess an ancient Greek or a Victorian boxer) the idea of not guarding with the free hand would be unthinkable (unless we are discussing Roy Jones Jr.), even in MMA fighters try to keep their hands in some kind of boxing stance. In contrast the fightbooks tend to depict the free hand so low as to be useless for strike defense, although quite useful in blocking an opponent who shoots in for a takedown.
P.S. I will try to make some study of the Petter’s manual. Thank you for the recommendation.
Stewart Sackett wrote:MaartenSFS wrote:... the fightbooks tend to depict the free hand so low as to be useless for strike defense, although quite useful in blocking an opponent who shoots in for a takedown.
Lower than a C18 or C19th bare knuckles boxer? As in figures 2 and 3 from http://ahfaa.org/boxingstance.htm -...strange extended lead stance with the arms held relatively low and the legs very straight. It is very different from the modern stance we are so used to seeing. Does this mean it was not as effective as the modern stance? No, it just means that boxing had different rules, and like the modern stance, the older stance catered to the rules of the game...
[Boxing of the time allowed] grappling and rabbit punching... Various throws, such as the crossbuttock and back heel, were employed with great success if one of the boxers got too close to the other. Infighting was a totally different concept back in the day than it is now. No referee to break up a clinch, only a cheering crowd wanting to see one of the boxers get dumped. This vastly changed the concept of boxing range in the period. Arms were positioned to accomodate the rules since an extended guard is more favorable at the longer range that the fighters found themselves punching from. Boxing under the LPR was very much a range game.
Return to “Unarmed Skills Discussion”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 12 guests
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||