Postby John_Clements » Thu Mar 16, 2006 11:04 am
Hi
See the Spotlight feature here on our site regarding Q&A about rapiers. That will answer a lot of this.
The key issue regarding edge blows in regard to the rapier (questions of its etymology and typology aside) is that it's important to keep in mind that not all sword types perform in the same manner.
The historical challenges of different battlefield and self-defense needs resulted in a wide range of long bladed weapon designs (and different methods for effectively employing them). Sword designs are specialized tools. Depending upon their dimensions of length and width, cross-sectional geometry, and edge and point configurations, some types will do one thing very well but not another. Some may have been intended more for cutting or slashing at either hard or soft targets, thrusting only at hard or soft targets, or a compromise somewhere in between. The characteristic qualities that permit one action will hinder the other. This gives different sword types different strengths and weaknesses depending upon how and why they expected to be used. Different sword types also have different shapes and that make them either stiffer or more resilient and thus better at cutting or at thrusting. Each sword design differs as to what it can do best within whatever kind of fighting conditions it was created to perform under. Each has its specialization, even if it is generalized.
Cutting or thrusting techniques could each be more effective or less effective depending upon its own tactical context. A fighter with a slender straight sword would naturally favor stabbing over cleaving or slashing with it. A lighter narrower blade does not have the mass or momentum and requires (as well as permits) a slicing action be added to the impact by pulling the blade back as it hits. A heavier wider one as it impacts neither needs (nor really even permits) such an action. The more mass a sword has the more effect it can have in its cuts and the hard it will be to set its attacks aside (but the less maneuverable it will be in recovering its ward following any strike or parry).
So, while sword thrusts differ only in the depth of point penetration, in contrast, cleaving, shearing or slicing edge blows can be quantitatively different. This why edge blows from slender thrusting swords –rapiers—cannot be viewed as equivalent to the edge blows of other dedicated cutting blades. While understanding of this simple dynamic is uncommon now, and it confuses many enthusiasts, it becomes self-evident when practicing energetic strikes using different types of sharply edged (and historically accurate) swords against a variety of realistic target materials.
A lot of this will be explained in my next book on swords, perhaps by the end of the year.
JC
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