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Benjamin Smith wrote:Well this new group of mine has had a long stuttering start over the last five months. I've been teaching longsword and have one dedicated student and a few fair weather comers. The point is that some of the new people have interests beyond my experience, some of which I would be willing to move into, provided they accept an introduction to ARMA, its methodology, techniques, and some background in the better known Western Martial Arts, so that we can talk on the same page. While being some months off, I would like to get some preparation underway. However, the difficulty lies in that some of what they are interested in I have very limited options to begin with, and no equipment.
First off, these people are dedicated medieval reenactors with little/no real experience in treating the subject as a martial art. Having said that, some of them are genuinely interested, and some want to learn how to use weaponry that I have little/no background in. I know of no easily available manuals, little literature, and only vague pictures, covering sword and shield, axe, or warhammer, varieties of which can be found all throughout the Renaissance Europe.
While I can make extrapolations on the subject from my experience with other weaponry (sword and buckler, longsword, etc...), I'm wondering if there would be a better place to start than trying to take the fighting I've learned with one weapon and say: "Well technique X should translate fairly closely. Test it with wasters, sparring, and test cutting (blunts will be completely out of the question for years, and it is unlikely I will still be here by the time anyone is ready to take them up), and say "This experiment seems to indicate that technique X with weapon Y works thus with weapon Z." Then report the results here for feedback. The long drawn out process of amateur application of the scientific method seems to be the only resource available to me.
The problem is exacerbated by the fact that I have no equipment available for the pursuit of any such activity. As a matter of fact, I had Hollow Earth marked as a place to go for leather axes and such. However, when I looked online today I found that they no longer offer anything but swords of various varieties. Which draws out a very problematic point, I have to recommend that they make any material that they might intend to use, and I don't even have designs to offer, except on sheild construction.
One final question: If it is the case that there is little/no solid historical material to start from, and I therefore can't make any claim to real historical accuracy, what do I claim about anything I might come up with? That it appears to be the most martially effective option that I can invent? I couldn't justify anything more than that, and that alone extends into the very realms of speculation that we regularly repudiate, and laugh at, from the scholarly and boffer community. The one point in my favor, which bears some thought, is that I'm a rated member of ARMA. I've been studying western martial arts since 2000, and I adhere rigorously to the principles and methodology that ARMA espouses, as opposed to making up everything wholesale, without regard to historical accuracy, study, science, discipline, peer-evaluation, or any other standard. The truth of the matter is that if anyone moves into this realm of little known fighting and weaponry, it ought to be someone from ARMA.
So thanks for getting through the rant, any help will, as usual, be greatly appreciated.
Benjamin Smith wrote:Even if I was to move into poleaxe (much less other weaponry) with the proper safety equipment, I still need the poleaxe equivalent of a waster, which apparently is no longer offered by anyone other than boycotted sources.
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