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Brandon Paul Heslop wrote:Ben,
"Romans not only easily conquered those who fought by cutting, but mocked them too. For the cut, even delivered with force, frequently does not kill, when the vital parts are protected by equipment and bone. On the contrary, a point brought to bear is fatal at two inches; for it is necessary that whatever vital parts it penetrates, it is immersed. Next, when a cut is delivered, the right arm and flank are exposed. However, the point is delivered with the cover of the body and wounds the enemy before he sees it...
... However, they are given that double-weight shield frame and foil, so
that when the recruit takes up real, lighter weapons, as if freed from the
heavier weight, he will fight in greater safety and faster. But when field
training was ended through negligence and laxity, the equipment (which the soldiers seldom put on) began to be seen as heavy."
- Flavius Vegetius Renatus (in Epitoma Rei Militari, ca. 390)
Brandon Paul Heslop wrote:I'm not trying to be a pain, here, but I can't simply let it slide: first we are told by Mr. Curtis that there are precious few sources on Roman martial technique, and then he proceeds to tell us that Vegetius' text is riddled with inaccuracies. Well, if Vegetius' work is full of mistakes, and we have so little apart from Vegetius to compare his work with, then how can it be said that anyone knows that any part of Vegetius' treatise is falacious? It doesn't make any sense.
You're on the right track. Go straight to the sources. Who are you gonna trust? Vegetius, or a modern student or academic? I don't know about you, but I'm gonna go with the guy who was actually around back in the day (and Vegetius was a hell of a lot closer to his subject than anyone, degree or not, living today).
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