Postby JeanryChandler » Tue Aug 24, 2004 12:11 pm
Regarding foyning, thanks for the definition, I was unfamiliar with the term. I have a comment here though which will probably be unpopular. There seems to be a prevalent belief among many fencers, WMA practitioners and spathologists / hoplologists that daggers were effective in defense only for dealing with the thrust. I was told this on this very board when I posted some sparring clips once, and I believed it.
That is, until I did more research and a few experiments. One of the first things I did when I finally got my first blunt was to put this to the test. I tried deflecting strikes from a paul chen practical viking sword with a cheap stainless steel pugio dagger replica with surprising success. Contrary to what I had been told, the weapon did not slip past or over the guard, nor snap the blade (though it did get nicked up). When I managed to borrow some steel gauntlets and arm protection, I tried the same experiment with my (4 lb) heimrick longsword and the same cheapie stainless steel pugio replica. I had the same result.
This is hardly a scientific experiment, but it has influenced by thinking. Since then, in looking at woodcuts of sword and dagger fencing, and the construction of the many parrying daggers themselves, I believe those weapons were intended to deflect strikes as well as thrusts.
It is much easier to deflect a thrust than a strike with a dagger, and deflecting (rather than hard parrying) strikes does expose the hand. But if you have a dagger with a 'close guard' (as silver reccomends in one line) or a gauntlet, it is certainly viable, and in any case better than being struck in your body. It is also possible to take some of the force of the blow with your sword, and then use the dagger to beat or bind.
Just a few thoughts,
J
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger