I am working on Meyer (Rasmusson's translation from http://schielhau.org/Meyer.title.html). Mainly I'm putting this online reference into a format suitable for making a hardcopy that I can take out in the yard or park where I can't access it online. It's format is kinda clunky for printing. Also I'm working on developing a study guide from it for our local group to use. Anyway, as I am reading/interpreting the manuscript I have come across a few questions about his stances/guards that are puzzling to me.
On page 2 (3rd paragraph) Meyer lists the 4 principal stances (roof, ox, fool, plow) as well as the 8 secondary (wrathful, window breaker, long point, barrier guard, unicorn, key, iron door, and changer). On page 6 he begins the explanations/descriptions of the guards and at the end of the 1st paragraph lists the secondary guards as (wrathful, long point, changer, close, iron door, hanging point, key, and unicorn) ... notice no window breaker or barrier guard, but the addition of close and hanging point. Why the change? Which of these (close or hanging), if either was he meaning by window breaker?
Also, the close guard is not pictured anywhere in the illustrations. The description is poor and could be interpreted to be something akin to fool (but with short edge down) or a tail guard. Talhofer's close guard (tafel 16) doesn't really show either of these as "close". What is the general accepted interpretation of Meyer's close guard?
TIA,
TJ
