Postby Jake_Norwood » Sun Feb 01, 2004 4:37 pm
The idea of it resting on the shoulder doesn't actually bother me that much anymore, when I think of what a fight is. Fights are dynamic and violent. Anything at rest isn't that. When would you carry the weapon on your shoulder? Moving about, heading into battle, when enemies are about? Sure, absolutely. But in the middle of a violent engagement? Absolutely not! If the guards are indeed transitional positions relating to cutting motions, then an "at rest" position supported by the shoulder simply doesn't have place. I cannot imagine that anything good could come of cutting up with the short edge only to rest the moving blade upon the shoulder.
BUT I'm not saying that the position didn't exist. I believe it did, and I play around with it frequently. I think that of all "resting" positions, it's the one that can most readily become a fighting stance, or from which a person at total ease could strike out. This kind of phenomenon is not uknown in HEMA. Both Fiore and Talhoffer advocate a low, hands-in-front position (breve) for unarmed encounters and receiving a blow. This is comfortable and can be held indefinitely, which a higher, more agressive Vom Tag cannot be, just as "putting up your dukes" wears you down eventually.
It's also worth considering in light of the master strikes, since the image that is probably best known of the resting Vom Tag over the shoulder is from Von Danzig, which spends a lot of time on the Meisterhau.
Zornhau - This can very easily be thrown from the shoulder, abeit with a focal point that is a little lower, but also very direct and still quite quick. It is certainly quicker than a zornhau from over the head.
Sheitelhau - this is the primary weakness of this gaurd, IMO, and is slower than over the head or a more stout over the shoulder Vom Tag. As has been oft debated, however, a vertical cut is not usually the best opener for a battle (even Ringeck concurs), and the "resting on the shoulder" position, whether it's Danzig's Vom Tag or Meyer's Zornhut, is clearly a zufecten-only position.
Schielhau/schiller - This is *easier* to do with the blade on the shoulder and the thumb underneath than otherwise, generally.
Krump - If this is performed with the thumb-on-flat, and by jutting the hands straight out from the shoulder then crossing them, instead of trying to zornhau into a krump or passing through schrankut, then not only is the krump executed to look exactly like many manual drawings, but it makes up for the lack of ability to attack from the left effectively that an on-the-shoulder guard causes.
Zwerch - this is easier to throw from this position than any other in zufechten, and with greater range and suddeness.
In conclusion, I don't think that the on-the-shoulder guard is for someone that is currently fighting, but rather for the man that suspects a fight, or expects a fight, but has not yet commited his momentum to the battle.
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director