Hey guys..just had a thought. I remember a lot of quotes and refutations about the point being superior to the edge in sword combat. Now, Correct me if I'm wrong, but weren't a lot of the masters who spoke of the superiority of the thrust masters of thrusting weapons? If that is true, then it makes sense. Fabris, for example, says the point is better to use than the edge. Fabris is also a rapierist. Why would a rapier master advise his students to predominate with the cut? The weapons is better designed for thrusting. And, in single combat with rapiers thrusts predominate, there are plenty of cutting strikes that are usable. But flip the coin and, even with the rapier, cuts become predominant with thrusts being used more sparingly. Now, the longsword having been developed as a weapon for battlefields, It makes sense that the style is predominantly a cutting one. Cuts are simply more useful in general against many enemies.
My point is, were the people who argued superiority of thrust over cut (at least, the earlier masters.) doing so within the context of weapons that were designed to thrust?
I know what I'm saying is nothing new or profound to people here, But I'm not an expert and I'd just like to introduce this take. Too often do I hear the phrases "Clumsy hacking weapon" or "sissy rapier". Point is, the weapons both existed at the same time and even later after the advent of the firearm. (indeed in Count of Monte Cristo, a character mentions having dueled a man three times with pistol, rapier, and two-handed sword...though it is fiction, does it seem terribly unrealistic? I mean, apart from two men surviving three duels against the same opponent with neither being seriously debilitated

) And I doubt the weapon masters of the period would have derided one another's blades or styles.
Just my thoughts, I'd appreciate yours
