Postby John_Clements » Wed Mar 10, 2004 5:52 pm
Hi Stu M.
Since you mentioned most rapiers as supposedly distally flattening toward their tips in regard to their cutting capacity, it reads as if you were offering this as evidence they cut?Anyway, I go on the evidence I can experience from my own cutting tests and my own examination of real weapons, and then seek a more holistic understanding of a historical manual, rather than isolating one instruction from one text and running with it to the exclusion of all others (as we see occur from time to time).
I think the implication in Swetnam’s statement on wrist blows with his rapier is self-explanatory when he advised: “strike not one blow in a fight, at what weapon soever thou fightest withall, except it be a wrist blow, and that you may as well doe with a rapier, as with a sword”. (p. 35) Since more directly he instructed: “Also, take headeth that thou strike not with thy rapier, for so thou may breake it, and bring thy self to thine enemies mercy, and it may be he will take the advantage of thee”. (p. E3). This hardly sounds like a weapon whose blows are going to significantly bite into flesh (especially if delivered with a mere "wrist blow"). As well, seeing that in Part XII, he writes of “to give a wrist blowe, the which blow a man may strike with his Rapier, because it is of small force, and consumes little time…” would again logically seem to fit in with the understanding that this kind of hit on the human wrist (with its thin bones and bundle nerve endings) can resulting disarming a man regardless of the nature of the weapon used.
A “cut” after all is any blow with the edge of a sword, regardless of the actual sharpness of such an edge or the capacity for that sword to make an incise wound. Just as a particularly curved sword can still thrust, though not nearly as well as a straight one, even a slender sword can “cut”, but not nearly as well as a wider one. After all, even a car-antenna or a slender cane rod can “cut” if you slash someone with enough force and hit the right spot.
Rapiers come in all shapes and sizes, and classifying them all as “rapiers” is not always easy (and as I described in my 1997 book, they are quite typical misidentified). But what they all have in common is that they are decidedly slender and rigid blades designed for a thrusting style (as opposed to a “cutting and thrusting”) of swordplay.
JC
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