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Many of us just like the term Medieval and Renaissance swordsmenship. <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" /> We really should not refer to Liechtenauer's teachings as the "German Style". Liechtenauer was German but there were other masters in Germany, thus we should just say "Liechtenauer's teachings". Likewise, we should just say "Fiore's teachings".John Demick wrote:
...could we just negate the fact that there is a german and italian style, and simply call it a universal style throughout western europe?
Jake or gene or Stew do these nearly the same as John and have probably adapted it
No, you are making an assumption here. There is no evidence he ever lived outside the modern borders of Italy - au contraire, all our documentary data for his life places him as living further south from where he was born (for political reasons probably). What we do know is that he studied under Germanic masters (of which there were many in Italy).
IMHO, at the end of the day, people need to get out of this 'Italian' and 'German' rubbish - it was all part of the Holy Roman Empire, and we can see as much variation between individual masters as between regions. What we have are *master* lineages, not *national* lineages, when the nations of Italy and Germany did not even exist as concepts yet.
And as we all know, students taught by one master will quickly diverge into different variations of the original art within one lifetime - it happens in modern martial arts and it probably happened then. One of the best lineages to illustrate this is the Bolognese lineage of Dardi, leading to Di Lucca, Manciolino and Marozzo, and on to Dall'Agocchie,
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