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Steven Blakely wrote:I would like to step back from the axe for just a seconed to tell you all something i have just found. Ken Mondschein did a review on medeival Swordsmanship buy john clements. I looked this book up becdause of a reference it has on axe fighting. I have never seen a more brutal review in my life. He used terms like Quote "Since most medieval martial arts only come down to us today in the form of elaborate, detailed written treatises, obviously, proper research methodology is critical, requiring not only a knowledge of all aspects of fencing, but also training in the historian’s craft and at least a passing familiarity with the original languages. “Medieval Swordsmanship” has none of this, rather, it is 324 pages of a 21st-century man’s opinion of how swords should be used, based on his own backyard experimentation, riddled with factual errors, and infused with a liberal amount of screeds against modern sport fencers, theatrical fight choreographers, and anyone else the author deems lacking in proper martial spirit and intent."
How often do we as hobby scholars face this kind of unabashed........well, Bashing.
It's almost identical to the issue of shield use, actually. We have some limited sources on certain types of shields (dueling shields and bucklers) in very limited quantities (a few manuals) from even fewer masters (three of our dueling shield manuals are Talhoffer, for example).
Brian Hunt wrote: Ken Mondschein has a personal axe to grind with JC, and you just read it.
I would have to agree on some of what you said. But my original point was in fact to the study of axes is that learning a technique from a different time period can help us better understand the way it could have been used during the ren periods. And to say that an axe is an axe was a little to all inclusive. When my point should have been that studuing the tomahawk would have all the same moves as a single handed ren axe. I do recognize that there will be some suttle diferences but i can safely argue that a single handed axe is a single handed axe. Even with a spike out the back. And as far as a pole axe is concerned verses a danich axe. There will be some suddle diferences bacause one has mor options than the other but not to make them totally diferent weapons.
Steven Blakely wrote:I have found pole axe waisters there on this website for the sword Academy. There a ren martial arts group based in canada. they also teach it. wich is anoying because there in canada. but i emailed them for either product information or a patern. If anybodie knows were i can get a pattern i would like to know.
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