Postby Jake_Norwood » Wed Mar 24, 2004 5:17 pm
Meyer's Hangetort is a guard, but that's a pretty loose term in Meyer. It's not a waiting position, but it is a position that you will move to in response to an attack or as a transitory position. I am strongly of the opinion that Meyer's 8 derived guards (one of which is Hengetort, or Hengen) are just that--positions derived from the basic four of Ochs, Pflug, Olber, and Tag.
In "pure" Ochs the point is at your opponent's face. In Hangetort, the point slopes toward the lower openings and somewhat across the body.
Just for fun, here's my take on Meyer's derived stances:
Ochs
-Hangetort
-Einhorn
-Schluessel
Pflug
-Langort
-Eisenpfort (which Meyer sort-of omits)
Olber
-Schranckhut (which he replaces Eisenpfort with)
-Nebenhut
-Wechsel
Tag
-Zornhut
I think that when Liechtenauer said that there were only four guards, he saw them much broader than Meyer and others later classified them, and that for Liechtenauer all high guards pointing forward were Ochs, pointing back-Tag. Middle forward guards were all pflug, and all low guards were Alber. Meyer, who was a great technical writer, broke it up into more teachable chunks.
Jake
Sen. Free Scholar
ARMA Deputy Director