Postby Steven Engelbach » Mon Mar 15, 2004 1:22 pm
I think that part of the reason the term is used so indiscriminately (besides just ignorance) is that what you call it is partially determined by use. For example, I own Arms & Armor's "Milanese Rapier." Now I bought it to use for studying Marozzo, Manciolino, et. al. In this use, I'd call it a "sidesword" as I believe it fits the bill (i.e. designed for cutting and thrusting, giving away some cutting ability in it's design in exchange for some usability for thrusting). However, I feel that I could use it quite well to perform teachniques of Fabris (clearly a rapier master). In fact, were I to encounter someone with a "true rapier" (i.e. to the dimensions described by Fabris, Capoferro, Alfieri, et. al.), I'd definitely want to use my Fabris' techniques as depending on Marozzo's techniques might get me killed. Although I'll generally be at a disadvantage at the beginning of any exchange (because of the shorter length), I would still be perfectly able to perform cavationi, find my opponent's sword, execute stesso tempo parry-counters, etc.
Still, for classification, it would be nice if the people who should know better would use the correct terms. Certainly a swept hilt mounted with a heavy cutting blade isn't a rapier.
I guess when you get close to the border between the two that it's like the proverbial definition of pornography (i.e. I can't tell you precisely what a rapier is, but if I handle a particular sword, I can tell you whether or not it is a rapier).
I think we have a problem on the other end, too. When does it stop being a rapier (or "transition rapier") and start being a smallsword? Blade characteristics? Hilt design?
Steve
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