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I. Hartikainen wrote:One interesting bit that Randall is addressing, and I forgot to comment on, is the tactical difference depending on whether the Scholar besets the underarm ward in half-shield or longpoint.
In case of longpoint the priest is instructed to bind always, either above or under (page 12).
In case of half-shield, the instruction is to fall under the sword and shield. If the priest was, again, to bind, why would the action be called totally different?
Interestingly, the half-shield against underarm is repeated on page 16, with the text saying that here you do all that was before (...et habebis omnia priora). Could this be referring to the possibility of also binding, or is it a reference to the action of falling under that was in the very beginning? Why is this repeated here?
Now, for something different, I'd like you to consider the following:
What if the "falling under" is not a bind, but neither a cut to the arm, and neither the complete action of following with the mutacio. Wikipedia gives the following for the Latin preposition "sub":
sub (+ ablative)
under, beneath
behind
at the foot of
within, during
about (time)
What if, it does not mean "under", but behind or within?
These three are for the priest: durchtritt, mutation of the sword, or with the right hand he may grasp sword and shield.
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:Hi everyone,
Sorry for leaving the discussion early, but I was away from keyboard in vacation.
Anyway, I think there are in fact a bunch of matters being discussed at once, of varrying significance:
1) What is the appropriate translation for cade sub gladium quoque scutum, does cade apply to just the sword or does it mean something else
2) Does this sentence apply to a whole sequence ending by the change of sword, or just to the action shown at the bottom of page 3
3) What exaclty is the priest doing at the bottom of page 3: cutting (if so where and from which angle), binding, thrusting etc.
1 and 3 are linked of course, but 2 is relatively independent.
Randall, I thought the gist of your point was to challenge the common answer to question 2, but now I'm not sure. As you said yourself it has little practical impact, because everyone already does the end of the action in the way you describe... Unless it brings a further understanding of other parts of the manual, it still means that if you are in a guard from the left and opposed by half-shield, you do the action at the bottom of page 3, whether you call it "falling under" or just "initial action of falling under".
Personally I think Ikka was correct when he highlighted this:These three are for the priest: durchtritt, mutation of the sword, or with the right hand he may grasp sword and shield.
Mutation of the sword is only one option, so falling under is not just attempting to do this.
As for problem 1, I trust much better latinists than me (Franck Cinato and André Surprenant). If they think cade sub ... can apply to the body as it dives under the opponent's weapons, I won't challenge their understanding of latin. They are not working from a translation but from the original text... And this interpretation of fall is not specific to English or German, it works in French too, for one thing. I think it goes deeper than just idiomatic use in germanic languages.
The real interesting question, in my opinion, is point 3. Whatever you call it the action is not clear, as the discussion shows, and many actions could end up in this position and lead to the three options of the priest.
Personally, I think it all hinges on our understanding of half-shield. Why is it a good opposition to the guards with the sword held at the left side? I'm no expert on I.33 but everytime I see this kind of discussion I have the feeling that we'd need a better understanding of the oppositions and how they protect the opposer. For one thing, I'm not all that sure that the right arm really is exposed in halfshield. I'm nearly sure that there is something lost on the manuscript with the lack of perspective, even for these seemingly simple positions. Since it is nowhere written that the one doing the falling under is even likely to cut the arm, and nowhere written that the one in halfshield protects his arm, I assume that halfshield protects the right side, and mostly right arm, far better than it seems on the flat drawing. It's in the direct line of attacks after all.
IlkkaI. Hartikainen wrote:it is quite easy to protect the hand in half-shield.
As Vincent implies, the perspective of the pictures can leave a part of the story untold.
If you direct your centerline towards the sword of the opponent your arm is basically no longer exposed, especially not as much as it is if half-shield is held straight towards the opponent.
I'd also like to remind that I haven't really seen anyone interpret the initial action as a bind in the sense that binds are done in I.33. An action with contact on the blade can be called a bind, or not, depending on how one defines these terms.
The mutacio has more of an element of really falling under than the other two, but it is clear from the text that there are three options. Either the falling under is the initial part, or then the falling under is any of the three. Is there an argument against this?
And what comes to pictorial evidence, the position is maybe a bit strange, but in all instances the priests sword is over the arm, not under.
I see your point, Randall, but please try to stay objective, especially to your own theory. Saying that you are right, and everybody else wrong, is perhaps not the best way to convince others, is it?
I'd love to read your reasoning as to why the mutacio is the key to the whole system of I.33, and how this action relates to the plays from other positions.
Randall Pleasant wrote:The mutacio has more of an element of really falling under than the other two, but it is clear from the text that there are three options. Either the falling under is the initial part, or then the falling under is any of the three. Is there an argument against this?
I only consider the mutacio to be an "under" action. The other two options, grabing the student's shield or wrapping up his arms , are basically forms of grappling.
Only one interpretation can be right.
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:I disagree that the sword is logically the only thing that can fall. I can't remember ever looking at the image and thinking that the sword has fallen. I can however pretty much figure how to let my body fall, or stumble, under the weapons of the adversary.
Seriously, we must be missing something if it's simply a cut to the arm.
Why would you describe a cut to the arm as "falling under"? Because it fails?
Why assume that the cut always fails?
Why even throw such a cut if it always fails?
Your whole line of thought would benefit from including page 17, as it shows a position somewhat similar to half-shield on the other side (weapons pointed up, buckler on the right even though the main lines of attack come from the left). Do you see the priest trying to cut the arms? No, he seeks contact first, and not a specially advantageous one at that, with the cross of swords occuring near the tip of both. I think in that situation, just like against half-shield, the arms are protected a lot better than you think.
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:Wait, is stepping through a shield grab? Does not look like it on page 18...
Only one interpretation can be right.
Once you get to a sufficient level of detail, I doubt that this statement can be true. In fact it's not even true in martial arts that have a living tradition (basically there are as many interpretations as there are teachers), so for martial arts reconstructed from a rather superficial writing along with stylized illustrations, it must be even worse...
I can easily forgive that one, my own breaks at work are often filled with sword-related business as wellRandall Pleasant wrote:You're right, my bad.Writing during breaks at work sometimes leads to a little embarrassment.
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:Only one interpretation can be right.
Once you get to a sufficient level of detail, I doubt that this statement can be true. In fact it's not even true in martial arts that have a living tradition (basically there are as many interpretations as there are teachers), so for martial arts reconstructed from a rather superficial writing along with stylized illustrations, it must be even worse...
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