the cutlass

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Steven Blakely
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Location: Eugene, Oregon

the cutlass

Postby Steven Blakely » Sat Jul 19, 2008 8:56 pm

any manuals on this sword :D
"Guns ruined war."
-Nathan Blakely

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Keith Culbertson
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Location: Columbus OH

Postby Keith Culbertson » Sun Jul 20, 2008 10:20 am

Starzhevsky (trans. by our illustrious Bart!) in the members area is a short treatise of some use; all the messer stuff works great with cutlass/falchion/etc., so see Meyer, Wallerstein/Durer, and others with that--also, escrima can be adapted for it.

best
Keith, SA

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Dave Rogers
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Location: Bellevue, WA

Re: the cutlass

Postby Dave Rogers » Tue Aug 05, 2008 4:20 pm

Steven Blakely wrote:any manuals on this sword :D


There's a 1904 Navy manual on the cutlass here:

http://goatlocker.org/resources/cpo/history/cutlass.doc

Hope this helps? It's short and doesn't cover much but the basics, but it's interesting, I think. It's more contemporary than most of our other materials but I think it is (as the Navy would nodoubt do...) just an updated edition of a sailor's manual that likely has been in a similar form for hundreds of years.

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Steven Blakely
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Location: Eugene, Oregon

Postby Steven Blakely » Wed Dec 17, 2008 12:00 pm

thanks :D
"Guns ruined war."

-Nathan Blakely

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Jeremiah Backhaus
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Location: West Bend, WI

Postby Jeremiah Backhaus » Wed Dec 17, 2008 12:05 pm

Wouldn't the Dussack writings also be applicable?

-Jeremiah (SA)
Repetitio mater studorum est.

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Benjamin Smith
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Postby Benjamin Smith » Sat Dec 20, 2008 12:16 am

There are probably some older writings, but one problem is that the cutlass became widspread in the era of the height of the smallsword among masters of defence in the late early modern period. I would think though that messer and dussack techniques would translate well. It was distinctly a lower class weapon.
Respectfully,

Ben Smith


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