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I. Hartikainen wrote:Hi!
From memory, I can only think of Fiore's defences against the dagger for longsword, but Fiore's one-handed sword position resembles a position where the sword would be sheathed, even if it is not mentioned. Anything else for the longsword I can't remember.
Talhoffer shows an offensive sword draw with a single handed sword, in the 16th century some masters state that the the natural position where the sword is drawn from the sheath is high on the right, point forwards (with whatever name the style in question gives to the position). Quintino describes how you can carry the sword with the scabbard upwards, half drawn, and then sling it towards your opponent. I think Thibault also addresses drawing the sword if I remember correctly, and for something earlier I remember Tom Leoni quoting Pietro Monte as describing an action of drawing the sword.
There probably is more, but this is what I remembered straight. In most cases it depends on the context, as usual. Most of the texts describe techniques for a duel, and in a duel the swords would be drawn to start with, and a longsword isn't generally designed for a quick draw, if you were in any suspicion that you might need it, and you were not able to carry it unsheathed, my advice would've been to detatch the sheath from the belt, as shown in Fiore.
I hope this helps!
Yours,
Ilkka
Sal Bertucci wrote:(Admittedly I don't know where they kept the tanto)
CalebChow wrote:Before one can wield a sword, one must obviously first draw it. The many techniques of the masters of old come to waste if one can't even unsheathe the sword.
.......
Are there any treatises/texts on the unsheathing (or setting oneself in a position for unsheathing) of the longsword?
Personally I think there's also a bit of Japanese cultural taste for melodrama involved, and the fact that they don't seem to treat the sword as just a tool in the same way Europeans do. Thibault's advice about stepping back to avoid being grabbed in the process sounds excellent to me, and it wouldn't surprise me if older Japanese sources from more practical times said much the same thing.
Fiore (Getty version) does give defenses if you should be attacked by a knife while sitting down. That suggests to me that surprise attacks were considered.
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