Jerrit Reed wrote:Sorry I believe the proper use of the world dual weld should be Florentine.
The use of "Florentine" to describe two-weapon fighting styles is an SCA idiosyncracy, and I've never seen any references showing that the term was actually used as such during the period when European two-sword styles actually existed. The actual terms used were--as has been mentioned--"case of rapiers," or alternatively
due spade or
dui spade (both literally meaning "two swords." There's also a type of Roman gladiator known as the
dimachaeri, from Greek
dimakhairoi ("two-swords-man"), but I guess we can safely ignore this one since I don't think I've seen any mentions of Roman two-sword styles outside the theatrical numbers of the gladiatorial arena.
If so, what are those different guards because I could not find them online.
Aside from the Marozzo guard depicted earlier (scroll back through the thread if you didn't catch it, there's also an online picture of Di Grassi's "high ward" for the case of rapiers:
(there's also a much bigger version her:
http://www.thearma.org/Manuals/NewManuals/DiGrassi/03001092.jpg) and one from Agrippa here:
http://www.thearma.org/Manuals/NewManuals/Agrippa/p112.JPG (I'm linking the image rather than posting it because it's seriously
big.
If you're looking for written descriptions, though...well, let me check. An old translation of di Grassi's stuff is here:
http://www.musketeer.org/manuals/diGrassi/contents.htm
I strongly advise you to read at least the introductory and single-sword ("single rapier") sections before going to the "case of rapiers" because otherwise you'd find it hard to make sense of the terms. Meanwhile, Manciolino's two-sword section is here:
http://www.hemac.org/modules.php?name=C ... age&pid=15
but since the translation still preserves many of the untranslatable Italian terms, you should check out some other sources as well to get a clearer picture of the guards and actions, such as Jherek Swanger's translation of the first three books of Manciolino's manual:
http://www.drizzle.com/~celyn/jherek/EngManc.pdf
or the Order of the Seven Hearts's page on the Bolognese swordsmanship style (of which Mancioliono and Marozzo are notable exponents):
http://www.salvatorfabris.com/SectionBolognese.shtml
Sorry if all this research sounds like a frightening amount to you, but trust me, you'll find it fun and won't be able to stop once you've gone into it. Who knows--you might even be motivated to join a local WMA group!