John,
I know how you feel about the rapier and cutting. We have had that discussion before, and I saw that it was a hot-button for you, for some reason. But we can have a divergence of opinions without your resorting to claiming that "too many movies" lead me to say what I said on my website. My opinion arises SOLELY from a meticulous and decade-long analysis of period Italian texts and from my owning and testing of originals.
By the way, the author of the article was yours truly and my website is
www.salvatorfabris.com. You have had your experience and it has lead you to the conclusion that a rapier cannot cut any better than a car-antenna. I and others have had mine, and my conclusion was different from yours. You also cite Silver and Smythe, with whom I am both familiar. I can cite a good amount of Italian treatises who lead me to the opposite conclusion.
I respect the fact that you have seen and examined countless originals. I have had my share of examining as well - and I also own two original rapiers (one from about 1590, the other from circa 1620), which I can use to my heart's content - and I assure you that a cut with any of them, properly delivered, will bite into flesh in a considerable way, in spite of their having not been sharpened in 400 odd years. One of the two has a blade that starts 1 1/4" wide at the ricasso, and does not taper until roughly three inches from the point. A strong and properly-delivered cut to the head with such blade would stop a fight or considerably slow you down unless you are Superman. Think about it: 20" of blade slicing through your head or limbs in a fraction of a second, PLUS a strong, percussive element (good cuts are delivered with the whole body, not just the arm.)
It is PRECISELY because with the right technique you can cut even with a car-antenna that the same right technique would make a 40"-bladed, double-edged sword produce a noticeable wound. Furthermore, a "rapier" is quite variable in blade-width, weight and length, so you can see that absolute statements to the incapability of a "rapier" to cut are not necessarily Gospel.
Now, if to that you add that the greatest majority of rapier cuts (as described by the likes of Fabris, Alfieri, Capoferro and others) are aimed at the head, temples and limbs, you can see that a strong, properly-delivered cut with such a sword would not be merely received as a "harrassment cut." And that was the point in my article, and I stand by it.
By the way - Fabris, Alfieri, Capoferro and many other Italian masters talk about the cut and identify its drawbacks specifically as tactical - most cuts requires two tempi, and can therefore be easily defeated by a thrust. In fairness, they also add that the thrust is "more lethal." But notice that they never say "a cut will never produce more than a superficial and negligible wound." In other words - would an Italian rapier of the time of Fabris remove a limb? Certainly not. Would it create a would that will slow you down and weaken you (= debilitate you)? Yes, if properly delivered.
Fabris goes as far as saying that were you to wrap a cloak entirely around your arm, you should still never use it to oppose a cut, for the opponent's sword could still cut through the cloak and produce a wound. His words, not mine (Book 1, part III "General principles of sword and cloak").
Alfieri (1640) uses cuts as alternative strikes to virtually 90% of his actions, as described in the plates. Capoferro (1610) is also quite generous in his use of cuts. Now, I may be saying this on faith, but I don't think that three masters of their caliber would deliberately mislead their readers into learning techniques that are all but ineffective.
Now - I am not discounting your experience, although I disagree with your conclusions. But as you can see, mine are not derived from watching movies.
By the way, if anyone is interested in seeing how one of my original rapiers can cut, you can come and visit us and see for yourselves. We are in Northern Virginia. Our general web address is
www.mashs.org, and we are there usually on Sundays. Email me in advance so that we can bring material for the test. I can also show you what a mildly sharpened replica can do. This is not one of my pet causes, but I still believe what I believe and I'm glad to show how I arrived to such conclusions.
Anyway, I know that I am as welcome here as the devil in a nunnery

- but I felt that if a statement was made not merely disagreeing with my reserch (which is fine) but suggesting that I get my facts from films and that I go about deliberately misleading, I must refute it.
Respectfully,
Tom Leoni