George,
Oh, but they can be both.
Yes, they can - if improperly performed. A proper parry, with the forte, often assisted by a forwards step to choke up the blow, won't damage your sword, and will not in any way hinder your capablity to adminster a riposte.
On the second point, if you block with the flat then the motion in your cutting plane is unhindered by motions perpendicular to that cutting plane, meaning that you can defend with your counter strike already in hard acceleration, your counterblow interrupted by nothing but the sharp sound of impact from your opponent's strike. Edge-on-edge confounds your abourning counterblow by having your opponent's blade impeding the natural motion, and if your opponent presses you have to come up with something else.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean here, to be honest. Chalk it up to my poor English or something...
I'd appreciate it if you could clarify a bit, though.
In double-time fencing styles this isn't an issue, but in single-time it is.
A lot of Renaissance, and even Medieval, fencing was done in double time, as you propably know.
Now this just shows that you actually advocate using edge parries all the time, because obviously you've not tried the flat or you wouldn't think such crazy things.
What? That I think the edge is more suited for certain defences means that I advocate their usage for all situations? I'm not sure where you got that (though if I was unclear in my post, then my apologies).
However, we can also flip to the edge and engage in a pushing contest if there's any prize money in it.
Or, we could just stop their blow with the edge and riposte.
Or, we could deflect it with the flat, and then riposte. As I've repeated several times already, I'm not saying that flat parries are useless, or that they weren't done, just that some defences do result in edge-to-edge contact, while still remaining perfectly effective.
And why don't you try explaining that flat-damaging blow to a mechanical engineer. I'm sure they'll find it highly amusing.
I'm certainly no engineer or metallurgist myself, but I know of at least one respected swordmaker who would agree with me in that doing hard stops with the flat of the forte is not exactly good for a sword, and many people who've practised systems that feature heavy use of stops for decades hold similar views on the matter.
You mean the Hungarian military sabre that gave us Olympic saber fencing? When asked about their earlier styles Hungarians just shake their heads.
Nope, not referring to anything related to sport fencing, but a military system for heavy sabres.
And he, an idiotic 16th century fencing master knows better than a 15th century fencing master? Please… On the bright side no matter what I write on this subject it'll be better than anything ever thought of in the 25th century, just because…
Um... idiotic? I'm not exactly sure what that was supposed to mean, but nonetheless:
He was a master taught in a lineage of masters that likely went back at least several centuries, and provably at least several decades without changing greatly. He lived in an age where swords were still used for deadly combat with some regularity. He also advocated fencing with sharps.
I know I would trust his word far more in matters related to fencing than that of anyone today.
John,
... if anything it would seem a warning against edge to edge bashing not a support it.
I mostly agree about Viggiani, but I don't quite see how a comment about potentially breaking your *adversary's* sword with a parry can be seen as a warning against that parry, though.
Besides, it's not like all edge-to-edge parries are damaging to either sword. Silver's true gardant, which I've used as an example in this thread quite a few times, is one such defence (according to the vast majority of interpretions, anyway) and despite being edge-to-edge, does not damage either sword.

