Postby Brian Hunt » Wed Jan 18, 2006 8:00 am
The SCA (Society for Creative Anachronism) is a form of sport. They have specific rules, fight to a simulated death, act out wounds (if your hit in the arm you can't use that arm anymore, if your hit in the leg you have to fight from your knees, if your hit in the head or body you have to die), limited target areas ( no shots from the knee down, no shots to the hand), they strike to the armoured areas as if the sword will cut through the armour instead of exploiting the weaknesses of the armour, and there is no grappling. They do fight full contact, the blow must be solid to be taken, they use rattan to make their weapons. They can field more people for a battle than any other group that I am aware of. At their Esrella War Event, there can be an average of 6000 people in armour on the battle field, much of which is plastic armour. Their form of combat can teach you timing, distance, a few other basic concepts that are germane to fighting, but it is not the type of combat taught in the manuals that have been written by the fencing masters of old. There are those in the SCA who are striving to be more correct in their form of combat, as much as they are able under the umbrella of their rule set, but their rules limit what they can and cannot do. The SCA is about re-enactment of what they feel the middle ages should have been, everyone is minor nobility or better, they cover a time period range from the fall of the roman empire to the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Thus you get a lot of anachronisms such as vikings and samurai mixing together, cavaliers and teutonic knights dining at the same table, etc. It can be a fun game, but in the end it is a sporting stick fight IMHO, not a true martial art, much like modern sport fencing is a sport and not a martial art. I have simliar opinions on their form of rapier combat as well. Fun sport, but the rules keep it as such, instead of a full fledged martial art.
Just my personal opinion and is not meant as an attack on the SCA, just a personal observation.
Brian Hunt
GFS