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seneca savoie wrote:One would hope that proper takedown defense would take priority over learning rolls in the course of ones training.
Michael Navas wrote:2. In the ARMA article "Top Myths of Renaissance Martial Arts" , under Myth 13, it says that two-weapon combinations such as sword & mace/axe/dagger were more common than single weapons and shields. Apart from Daisho, Filipino dual knife fighting and rapier & dagger, I've never encountered any information about this. I have always presumed two-weapon fighting to be an Fantasy RPG construct (not least from personal experience), but is it correct that using two weapons was as common as weileding two-handed weapons? And what of the techniques involved? Does any surviving material exist? Were two-weapon combos truly a preferred mode of fighting on the battlefield?
JeremyDillon wrote:I've read somewhere (on this very site, possibly) that Spanish sword and buckler men during the renaissance made use of tumbling to get behind the points of pikes and get at the pikemen themselves. I'll try to locate my source on this, I believe it was an essay here.
Edit:
Here it is (from The Sword and Buckler Tradition by J. Clements, http://www.thearma.org/essays/SwordandBuckler.htm ):
"The Spanish sword and buckler men of the early 1500s are among the best known proponents of the weapons. They wreaked havoc up and down the battlefields of Europe, even against the famed Swiss pikemen. A favored tactic was to close against pike formations and try to roll under the polearms then pop up among their clustered opponents where their shorter weapons could wreak havoc."
Also:
"As Machiavelli tells it, the Spaniards at the battle of Ravenna in 1512 fell furiously on the Germans, “rushing at the pikes, or throwing themselves on the ground and slipping below the points, so that they darted in among the legs of the pikemen.”"
Hope that helps
Gene Tausk wrote:seneca savoie wrote:One would hope that proper takedown defense would take priority over learning rolls in the course of ones training.
Learning how to fall and roll is a necessary part of any combat art. I guarantee that at least at one point in a person's life he will take a nasty spill, whether through combat or simply the hazards of life. Knowing how to fall and roll will make the difference between shrugging it off as a minor inconvenience vs. a serious injury.
Gene Tausk wrote:seneca savoie wrote:One would hope that proper takedown defense would take priority over learning rolls in the course of ones training.
Learning how to fall and roll is a necessary part of any combat art. I guarantee that at least at one point in a person's life he will take a nasty spill, whether through combat or simply the hazards of life. Knowing how to fall and roll will make the difference between shrugging it off as a minor inconvenience vs. a serious injury.
seneca savoie wrote:Gene Tausk wrote:seneca savoie wrote:One would hope that proper takedown defense would take priority over learning rolls in the course of ones training.
Learning how to fall and roll is a necessary part of any combat art. I guarantee that at least at one point in a person's life he will take a nasty spill, whether through combat or simply the hazards of life. Knowing how to fall and roll will make the difference between shrugging it off as a minor inconvenience vs. a serious injury.
Breakfalls are definately important as far as martial arts training in general, but learning how to roll out of a throw or lock is I think secondary to learning how to counter takedowns in the first place. Think of a HS wrestling team, which you have magically found yourself coaching- do you first teach them to backward roll in response to a shoot, or would you instead spend hours drilling the sprawl in order to stay up?
seneca savoie wrote:Gene Tausk wrote:seneca savoie wrote:One would hope that proper takedown defense would take priority over learning rolls in the course of ones training.
Learning how to fall and roll is a necessary part of any combat art. I guarantee that at least at one point in a person's life he will take a nasty spill, whether through combat or simply the hazards of life. Knowing how to fall and roll will make the difference between shrugging it off as a minor inconvenience vs. a serious injury.
Breakfalls are definately important as far as martial arts training in general, but learning how to roll out of a throw or lock is I think secondary to learning how to counter takedowns in the first place. Think of a HS wrestling team, which you have magically found yourself coaching- do you first teach them to backward roll in response to a shoot, or would you instead spend hours drilling the sprawl in order to stay up?
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