Jaron Bernstein wrote:
Vadi says that your sword should be from your armpit vertical to the ground.
Sorry Jaron, but unless you or anyone else can show me otherwise, I believe that your statement is misleading and jumps to conclusion.
Vadi says that the "pommel should arrive under the arm", but he never specifies the armpit or exactly where under the arm, whether that's above, below, or at the elbow even. No word I see means "vertical" either.
However, like G. Silver, suggests that the proper length is different for everyone and is relative to an individual's size. For Vadi, it seems that the overall length, where "the pommel should arrive under the arm" is still within reasonable lengths. I myself am 5'8" and if I measure from the ground up to my elbow once, and my armpit second, I get a variation from about 42" to 50". Using Silver's method of measuring, I get a blade that is about 35". Add hilt and pommel for a total of around 10", and I would get a sword around 45" long, which for me is about right for a hand-and-a-half type of sword. Working backwards, and assuming that Fiore and Vadi were more fond of hand-and-a-half types of sword, I feel that Vadi may have meant under the arm as being between the armpit and the elbow (that's where 45" lands under my arm, half way).
Armpit length (50") gets me closer to later swords similar to what is depicted in Fechtschules, Meyer, etc.
Unfortunately in this Vadi is a bit too vague as to any specific measurement since "under the arm" leaves a lot to be desired, but he does add that "it is in his writing". Maybe it's in another book somewhere that we no longer have access to or just something we all missed in the translation and it's right under our noses.