Postby Jeffrey Hull » Mon Nov 05, 2007 1:41 pm
I realise that this subject is new to you and that you ask your question in good faith. I want to provide you a decent answer.
But just so you know: This topic is a contentious one in the so-called Western martial arts community. Everyone from the ill-informed to nutcakes to phonies naysay and deny this method of parrying / displacing, all despite the vast proof of historical fight-books and martial praxis and basic physics that we ARMA scholars find reasonable & workable and provide other fencers to consider.
From the archives, I reprise & revise a post I made previously to address this further, one that met general approval of my ARMA fellows:
Flat-Use in Fechtbuecher
The use of the blade-flat in German Medieval and Renaissance langes schwert (longsword) fencing is something advocated by various Fechtmeister in their manuals.
By this is meant the meeting during versetzen or brechen of fighter and foe's swords flat-to-flat, flat-to-edge, or edge-to-flat, but not edge-to-edge.
Firstly, witness the German grandmaster Johannes Liechtenauer advising such.
Liechtenauer (via Ringeck-1438)
(similarly repeated by Von Danzig-1452, Lew-1450; Von Speyer-1491)
(Thanks to Arts d'Armes transcription)
(My translation - JH)
Here we are told a way to break through the ward of a foe:
(25v) Haw krump zù den flechen den maistern, wiltu sy schwechen.
(25v) Hew crumpler to the flats of masters, thus you will weaken them.
Both Ringeck and Von Danzig later explain such as an attack option from Schrankhut -- for example, as Von Danzig explains:
Liechtenauer (via Von Danzig-1452)
(Thanks to Arts d'Armes transcription)
(My translation - JH)
(51v) Die stuck treyb vß der schrankhùt also:
...Item, oder haw im krump zur flechen; vnd alß bald es klützt, so (52r) such die nach mitt der kurtzen schnyden.
(51v) Thus drive the play out of barrier-ward:
...[Thus as aforesaid] or hew him crumpler to the flats; and as soon as it clashes, then (52r) seek the next / nearest [opening] with your short-edge.
Which I have done successfully any number of times versus training partners, and which other fencers certainly have done too.
*****
Secondly, witness Hans Talhoffer advising such.
Talhoffer-1459
(My transcription & translation - JH)
(3r) how uff sin fleche
so tuostu in schwechen
wenn eß knuolt obnen
So nym ab Daz wil ich loben
(3r) Thus hew upon his flats,
So do you weaken him
When it clashes high,
Then take off – that will I laud.
What seems described here is a fighter breaking a foe's strike or ward, doubtlessly at the flat of foe's blade, which brings them to a hard bind, wherefrom fighter takes off with his blade and strikes round to an opening of foe.
*****
Lastly, witness Joachim Meyer advising such.
Meyer-1570
(Thanks to Rasmussen-Schielhau transcription)
(My translation - JH)
...fang jhm sein Schwerdt aff deine klingen fleche...
...catch him his sword upon your blade-flat...
And furthermore Meyer advises one to properly do hanging-ward:
...empfach damit seinen streich auf deiner Klingen fleche...
...withstand his strike upon your blade-flat...
Rather straightforward stuff there.
*****
Plus there are many other de facto examples of where the best option for displacing turns out to be flat-to-flat interface of the blades, examples I may leave to other fellows to describe if they so desire.
And by the way, yes, there are some sensible Japanese ryu which advocate similar methods of displacing with katana and so forth.
And yes, please read those excellent articles about sword-displacement and edge-damage by John Clements and others, available in the Articles & Essays section of the ARMA website.
*****
Thus to whomever still disagrees with flat-use as sensible and preferable:
If flat-use is a problem for a fencer, then really it is not ARMA with whom he disagrees. Indeed, he actually disagrees with physics, respect for one's own weaponry, and sadly, the Fight-Masters.
JLH
*Wehrlos ist ehrlos*