Postby Jake_Norwood » Mon Jan 17, 2005 6:05 pm
Hi all.
Jeff-
As usual, right over my head. Slow down, buddy. <img src="/forum/images/icons/laugh.gif" alt="" />
William-
I haven't seen anyone using this version of the guard, nor have I seen it illustrated off the top of my head (you'll be hard pressed to find any illustration of left vom Tag anywhere in the manuals, though, I'd wager).
A drawback to this approach is the fact that you can't do it with the messer...or at least it doesn't seem that you could. The relationship between the longsword and the messer is a great key to the art, and it's unravelled a lot knots for me. That's why this bothers me. I really like this grip/version of vom Tag. I think that it makes several techniques more immediately available (see John's post). It also fits a pattern that I've been theorizing about for a pretty long time about inverted relationships between edges, crossed and uncrossed arms, etc. in German swordsmanship. In other words, I think that there's a lot of positive theoretical evidence here, but I'd love to actually see an image or read a passage that lends credibility to gripping this way.
However, re-addressing your post, William, the technique -- or position, really -- isn't complicated in the least. It's just different from what we've been doing and what's generally accepted as "correct."
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director