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Greetings fellow Scholars of the sword,
I thing I have a bit of misunderstanding after reading Hanko and Meyer, Danzig, Paulus Kal and Sutor, and watching some ARMA videos.
1. What is the cut called, which goes like this:
It starts in an Ox (often showed after a zwerch), goes above your head, the point rotating backwards, and hitting from the left side with the false edge, at the finish you have to turn your body a bit and end in a Thwarted, Ox-like stance with both arms crossed? Is it the Sturzhau or the Schiller, or something completelly different?
2. Is the Schiller of Hanko the same as the Schielhau?
3. Here: http://www.dreynschlag.at/historisches_schwert_krumphau.php the Krumphau is something else than here: http://www.thearma.org/essays/mastercuts.html
No offense here, for I found evidence in codexes for both being right... *confusion, confusion*
4. Why does Hanko say, that the Pflug is the stance, witch is called Alber in all other codexes (like Danzig)? Interestingly, Hanko also speaks of an Alber, but does not say what it looks like. In my opinion, since Master Doebringer's codex is the oldest in the german scool, that should be taken as genuine... what do you think?
5. This is a strange one!
Danzig calls himself student of Lichtenauer, in 1452. Since in 1389 the Grandmaster must have been dead (Hanko would never write down his codex while the Master was alive, breaking his vow!), Danzig must have died at an age around 70 (almost unbelievable in THAT age!). Then, some call Master Lichtenauer "Johannes", but Paulus Kal, when he lists the stundents of the Grandmaster, talks of HANS Lichtenauer.
Now. The question is. Since Lichtenauer would not be listed as his own student (yay), there must also have been a second Lichtenauer, probably his son, called Hans? (I know it sounds like blasphemy). Could it be, that Danzig actually met the second Lichtenauer?
6. Who are Andres Juden, Justs von der Nyssen and Niclas Prewßen? They are listed by Hanko as "other masters". I first thought, they were students of the Grandmaster, but then again, Paulus Kal, who really WAS one, doues not even mention them. Still. Doebringer writes down their teachings in the SAME codex as the teachings of the Gandmaster. Strange, is it not?
. What is the cut called, which goes like this:
It starts in an Ox (often showed after a zwerch), goes above your head, the point rotating backwards, and hitting from the left side with the false edge, at the finish you have to turn your body a bit and end in a Thwarted, Ox-like stance with both arms crossed? Is it the Sturzhau or the Schiller, or something completelly different?
2. Is the Schiller of Hanko the same as the Schielhau?
3. Here: http://www.dreynschlag.at/historisches_schwert_krumphau.php the Krumphau is something else than here: http://www.thearma.org/essays/mastercuts.html
No offense here, for I found evidence in codexes for both being right... *confusion, confusion*
4. Why does Hanko say, that the Pflug is the stance, witch is called Alber in all other codexes (like Danzig)? Interestingly, Hanko also speaks of an Alber, but does not say what it looks like. In my opinion, since Master Doebringer's codex is the oldest in the german scool, that should be taken as genuine... what do you think?
5. This is a strange one!
Danzig calls himself student of Lichtenauer, in 1452. Since in 1389 the Grandmaster must have been dead (Hanko would never write down his codex while the Master was alive, breaking his vow!), Danzig must have died at an age around 70 (almost unbelievable in THAT age!). Then, some call Master Lichtenauer "Johannes", but Paulus Kal, when he lists the stundents of the Grandmaster, talks of HANS Lichtenauer.
Now. The question is. Since Lichtenauer would not be listed as his own student (yay), there must also have been a second Lichtenauer, probably his son, called Hans? (I know it sounds like blasphemy). Could it be, that Danzig actually met the second Lichtenauer?
6. Who are Andres Juden, Justs von der Nyssen and Niclas Prewßen? They are listed by Hanko as "other masters". I first thought, they were students of the Grandmaster, but then again, Paulus Kal, who really WAS one, doues not even mention them. Still. Doebringer writes down their teachings in the SAME codex as the teachings of the Gandmaster. Strange, is it not?
The difference I see between the two krumps is the following. In the Dreynschlag homepage, the Krump rotates from right to left with the fales edge, hitting the hands. And, if I interpret the fotos on the ARMA page correct (not that easy, since they are not numbered, and show the endeffect), that Krump goes from right to left with the true edge, then comes back from left to right with the false edge, hitting the head, or, if the first action would be a full circle, the false edge would come up from the bottom to top (riverso fendente?). Like I said before, in one codex (cant say which one, I read too much the last days) says that with a Krump you can cut the hands, but Hanko describes the Krump the way ARMA does it. I guess, that's why it's called "Hook" (=Krump).
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