Postby Jay Vail » Thu Sep 26, 2002 8:42 am
The Talhoffer illustration is ambiguous and one cannot make any firm judgment about whether Talhoffer meant to show a thrust kick intended to push the opponent away, or a snap kick made with the bottom of the foot rather than the ball. It could be a pushing kick or one intended to have percussive effect. I have seen Indonesian fighters use the same style of kick, front with the striking surface at the bottom of the foot target on the stomach, as a percussive kick in exactly the same manner in weapons fighting as illustrated by Talhoffer.
From what I have seen, what we now call the front snap kick, with the impact point the ball of the foot, may be a 20th century invention. I have searched many old pictures of karate practitioners from the late 1800 to 1920s for how the front kick was done and I cannot recall seeing a single one doing the front kick as we know it today. The front kick seems to have been done either with the top of the foot to the groin, sometimes even with the point of the toes; and with the bottom to every other target (as in the police kicking down a door). In fact, the front kick with the bottom of the foot can be found in widely separated martial arts, from Japan, China, Indonesia; and I once saw a photo of a classic Greek statute of a pankrationist who clearly was making a front kick to the legs with the bottom of the foot as the striking surface.
It is not surprising that we see few if any front kicks with the ball of the foot in many styles and in particular the old illustrations. Such kicks are in fact very dangerous to the kicker. There is a substantial chance of injury to the foot with such a kick, especially when kicking to the body, which is one reason you do not see the front snap often used in karate kumite. Indeed, even kicking with the ball of the foot to the legs can also present dangers. This is especially so if one is barefoot or wearing light shoes. If you examine the footwear common until the last century or two, most shoes are lightly made compared to those we wear today. The samurai wore sandals woven from reeds, the Chinese wore light cloth shoes, and European medieval footwear was often hardly more sturdy than moccasins. See The Medieval Soldier by Embleton and Howe. This footwear provides little protection for the toes and feet when striking hard surfaces like knees and shins (and elbows and hips when one misses the target), making kicking a dangerous enterprise unless the striking surface is the bottom of the foot.
This is probably the reason why one does not see the roundhouse and other kicks in many battlefield oriented systems such as kampfringen and koryu jujutsu. (De Liberi apparently illustrates a sidekick to the knee or back of the knee; that is how Keith Ducklin interprets it anyway, and I tend to agree).
In summary, the Talhoffer illustration could be either a thrust or snap kick with the bottom of the foot. Without some explanation in the text, we can interpret it either way. I would interpret it as a percussive kick rather than a push off. Why waste the chance to deliver a good blow that could stun or injure in preference to a push that merely gives you -- and him -- space and prolongs the fight?
Yours in swordplay,