New publication: Dagger Fencing: The Italian School

For Historical European Fighting Arts, Weaponry, & Armor

Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford

KeithFarrell
Posts: 58
Joined: Sun Sep 30, 2012 5:35 am
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Contact:

New publication: Dagger Fencing: The Italian School

Postby KeithFarrell » Fri Feb 19, 2016 12:37 pm

Image

Today, fighting with dagger versus dagger, or with knife versus knife, is not a common scenario that people might expect to face. However, it was more common in the Middle Ages and in the Renaissance, when it was normal for people to wear a dagger on their belt. Arguments or fights with daggers could break out; and while duels were more often fought with swords, combatants could also agree to do so with daggers.

This is not a book on modern knife fighting; rather, it is a book dealing with the historical knife fighting of Renaissance Italy. The modern blade aficionado will also find material of interest. The book offers several views of short bladed weapons that were developed and tested when cold steel was the king of weaponcraft and when duels were more common than today.

Carlo Parisi was born in Northern Italy in 1974. He has always been interested in weapons and martial arts, and the two met in Historical Fencing, which he began practising in roughly 1998. A few years later, he started doing his own research, and became a member of HEMAC in 2003. Since then, he's been teaching classes at various events in Europe, and set up his own club in 2011. His main interests are sabres and daggers, but he studies a variety of weapons and methods. This is his first book on fencing.

Book Details:
- Author: Carlo Parisi
- Editor: Keith Farrell
- Illustrators: Carlo Parisi, Andrea Tomassini, Daria Izdebska, Keith Farrell
- Publisher: Fallen Rook Publishing
- Date of Publication: 1st February 2016
- ISBN: 978-0-9934216-2-4
- Binding: Perfect-Bound Paperback
- Pages: 107
- Height: 20.99 cm
- Width: 14.81 cm
- Language: English

Available to purchase through the Academy of Historical Arts online store, from Lulu.com, or from Amazon.co.uk!
-- Keith Farrell --
Academy of Historical Arts: website | Facebook
Fallen Rook Publishing: website | Facebook
KeithFarrell.net: website

Return to “Research and Training Discussion”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 11 guests

cron

 
 

Note: ARMA - The Association for Renaissance Martial Arts and the ARMA logo are federally registered trademarks, copyright 2001. All rights reserved. No use of the ARMA name or emblem is permitted without authorization. Reproduction of material from this site without written permission of the authors is strictly prohibited. HACA and The Historical Armed Combat Association copyright 1999 by John Clements. All rights reserved. Contents of this site 1999 by ARMA.