Postby Henri de La Garde » Mon Jan 07, 2008 9:02 am
Hang on, Jay, I'm interested!
I work alot with (arm-strapped) non- or slightly-curved heater shields, and I use sources such as:
1) the Talhoffer dueling shield and sword and buckler sections (even some of the messer plates are inspiring for sword and shield).
2) Ringeck sections on sword and buckler.
3) I.33 of course.
4) the Talhoffer-derived system explained by Paul Wagner and Steven Hand in the two SPADA journals, and currently being beautifully expounded upon by Hammaborg in their series of YouTube videos.
To answer your question, which I think is, 'Does I.33 reflect the mechanics of larger sword and shield use?' I would say, absolutely.
But I'm discovering more and more that there is not simply one shield; and just as we would never expect rapiers, estocs, longswords, and arming swords to be used in the same way, so too must shield type determine use.
For example:
Take a look at the Hammaborg clips again, in particular, think of the clip in which the swordsman advances and switches the shield from the left to the right (what the SPADA articles refer to as an inside ward) to trap the opponent, whose exposed sword arm is then cut (this is in the first 17 seconds of the video titled "Hammaborg Talhoffer variations for Viking Shield and Sword"). The technique works because the shield is a large, center grip round shield. While you can probably imagine a variation on this with an arm strapped heater shield, the obstruction (in inside ward) of the heater shield makes the subsequent sword strike a bit slower than when the Viking round is used.
I don't know if this is fair, but recently I've been putting various shield types in my mind on three different axis:
1) The first one is the amount of curvature of the shield: the heavier the curve, the closer to the body the shield is likely to be held, and the flatter the shield the more it can be brought edge-on to the opponent (regardless of size: I.33 and the Hammaborg videos both feature 'edge-on' shield use).
Deeply curved shields are very likely to be used in a guige configuration, as they don't need to be held away from the body. This idea comes entirely from the SPADA II article.
2) The second axis is the size axis, of course. The larger the shield, the more movement the fighter will do around the shield, and the less the shield will be moved around the fighter. While Talhoffer dueling shields are arguably fairly stationary, the I.33 buckler obviously orbits the fighter, and not the opposite. Also with this comes the notion that the smaller the shield, the further it can be held from the body. I.33 involves the buckler often extended as far from the body forward as possible, both because it allows the fighter to protect the sword hand, and because it makes geometrical sense that the buckler can easily intercept incoming attacks with smaller motions the closer it is to the opponent.
3) The third axis is shield reach. Take a center-gripped Viking round like those shown in the Hammaborg videos and stand square. Hold both arms out in front, with the sword in the non-shield arm. The distance from the shield hand to the shield rim is probably in the neighbourhood of 10 to 12 inches. The distance from the sword hand to the sword tip is likely to be around 30 inches. So, you are now carrying two instruments with varying reach beyond the hands to intercept attacks and bind the opponent. Now try the same experiment with the sword and buckler: while the sword reach is the same, a buckler only extends about 5-7 inches forward past the hand. Therefore the techniques used for binding with sword and buckler might involve the use of the sword as the first weapon to make contact with the enemy's ('falling under the sword') or both weapons make contact simultaneously ('the shield knock'). Heater shields and bucklers share this in common, as both a heater shield and a buckler, regardless of their size, have a similar forward reach past the hand of only a few inches. Whereas with center gripped shields with larger reach, a greater variety of binding and shield to shield engagements can be used.
I'm not sure if I'm explaining this right, but the short answer I would give is that I.33 has much in common with other shield use, particularly if the shield happens to be a small or medium sized flat shield with only 5 to 7 inches of forward reach.
Thanks for reading my rambling prose.....