Postby John_Clements » Fri Oct 22, 2004 5:43 pm
Hi Chris,
I have great respect for the 18th and 19th century systems, and I appreciate those who work diligently now to explore them and advocate their effectiveness, since these methods have sometimes been unfairly denigrated. They were products of their environment and fulfilled the needs they were required to.
So, I would not dispute that 18th & 19th century swords or swordsman could kill opponents in combat. But, do consider Captain Nolan’s report from the 1840s on the fearsome blows of the Nizam, wherein they said they didn’t even teach any method because “a sharp sword will cut in anyone’s hands”. As well, writing in 1854, the battle experienced English military officer John Jacob rightly noted, “Great mistakes exist regarding the respective powers of the edges and points of swords” adding of well-made English blades that, “The things cut of themselves, however unskillfully handled.”
Anyway, I’m not sure why you can’t employ your St. George guard using the flat? Holding the weapon with the forward edge aimed back and the thumb & palm supinated upward achieves this quite well. But, nevertheless I still see it find as inferior to a hanging defense.
Curiously, there is no St. George’s guard mentioned in the many late 17th century cut & thrust fencing texts, such as the backsword writings of Sir William Hope nor in the 1747 text of John Godfrey. Donald McBane, going on experience in battles and duels from the late 1600s, but having been taught a French smallsword method as his foundation, used the St. George guard as a reactive position against high cuts, calling it the “most securest.” Further, the anonymous Highland Officer author of one 1790 fighting treatise, Anti-Pugilism or The Science of Defense, described the St. George’s Guard in Lesson VI, stating: “Is seldom used but in order to prevent being broke in upon by common cudgel players, or for show.”
In his 1805 Scotch broadsword treatise, Lt. Thomas Mathewson wrote of “receiving and giving blows with the edge” (forte) and in his introduction he wrote, “Nor do I speak of the St. George guard, half hanging guard, and others, which are found obstructive to the proficiency of the learner, and which the ancients used only for ineffectual shew, and [to] lengthen their lessons.” ( p. 9).
The Art of Defence on Foot with the Broadsword and Sabre in 1804 also stated, “It must be observed that the St. George’s guard is not intended to lie under, but only to stop a blow at the head, when your antagonist advance so closely upon you, that the hanging guard Is not sufficiently secure.” (p. 61-62).
So, it seems there was no consensus of the utility of the St. George guard/parry, (and it surely wasn’t employed as seen in countless movies and television and stunt-fighting shows where a cut straight down the middle from a two-hander is ridiculously taken on the edge right in the center of the blade).
I think it’s worth repeating once again that, yes, most all systems of fencing from the 18th and 19th centuries relied on double-time parrying actions that passively take cuts on the edge of the blade closest to the hilt. Yet, this was not a significant part of Medieval and Renaissance traditions of cut and thrust fencing.
So, why when it comes to edge damage from parrying do we see such a discrepancy between earlier Medieval and Renaissance fencing methods and those of the 18th and 19th centuries? We can note that the environment and circumstances under which later methods existed did not reflect the degree of challenge faced by Medieval and Renaissance methods. They certainly faced little to no armor, shields, or pole-weapons, for example, and no real hazards from either two-handed or double combinations weapons. The later styles were also clearly not influenced as much by Medieval and Renaissance systems, as by the civilian smallsword, which many even called the basis of their teachings. Hence, the later styles relied for defense, not on displacing blows and deflecting actions as did the earlier ones, but invariably upon rigid guarding positions for receiving cuts on the forte/ricasso. Further, once firearms became the dominant military weapons, schools of fence focused not on battlefield utility but almost exclusively upon defense in personal duels of honor. As a result, swords were less prized and military blade quality declined (especially for mass produced regulation swords), and was often criticized at the time. Thus, fewer kinds of swords being used by fewer swordsmen under fewer situations against fewer types of threats, naturally results in changes to the practice and performance of any fighting art. I think in that regard they can be held as a “degeneration,” but no more than say, a modern lion is a “degenerate” version of a saber-toothed tiger, if you follow my meaning.
Cheers,
p.s.
can you give me any details on that combat encounter with the Native American Indians?
JC
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