I have a note about an Italian blunt called a Spada da Zogho (“practice sword”) but have no reference or citation for it. Can anyone help me find it???
It sounds like it might be a regional variation of a term from Italian fencing texts of the early 1500s which begin to refer to practice weapons called, spada da gioco, a “sword for play” (also called spada da mara, a rebated sword, as opposed to spada da filo, an edged sword.)
Fiore’s prologue of c.1409 (Getty edition) refers to ferri moladi (“blunted blades”) as being used in practicing, as opposed to a çugare a spade di taglio e di punta or sharply edged and pointed blades. Plus we all know about the Federschwerter (“feather-swords”) used for practice in many Fechtbuchs.
[BTW, I have a theory that these are all the same kind of Federschwerter and that even the English term foyle (from the French refouler) which later comes to mean fencing “foil” actually refers to a Federschwert.]
But a source for this Spada da Zogho is driving me nuts.
JC

