Postby Craig Peters » Mon May 01, 2006 10:40 pm
Lance,
Like you, I too had often initially wondered why the zwerch was supposed to be executed with the false edge when striking from right to left. The answer came to me after becoming more comfortable with the false edge zwerchhau and comparing it to a true edge zwerch. You should find that if you execute it with the true edge, and keep your blade horizontally aligned, (not cutting at a downward angle as you do in the video), that it's not as easy to control your cut as it is with the false edge. If you hold out your arms as though holding a long sword normally with the true edge as the forward striking edge and make the cutting motion with your arms in the air, you'll notice they can travel a long way from right to left and that during the motion, it's fairly easy to deviate from a perfectly horizontal cut. In contrast, with the arm position necessary to make a false edge Zwerch, your right arm will be bent in a nearly 90 degree "L" shape by the end of the strike such that your cut will wobble far less because the biomechanics of your arm's position prevents the greater freedom of movement found in the true edge version of the strike. In this case, "greater freedom of movement" equals "greater ease for the sword to deviate from the line of the cut". Try it out a few times and you'll see what I mean; remember, of course, to use a horizontal cut, rather than an angled one.