admin wrote:Gordon L wrote:Now that some others have moved us onto the subject of the light sabre - I'd like to correct a widely communicated misconception about them.
Used with proper technique, they do not flick.
They only flick if you attack with the flat of the blade, which is patently not a useful cut.
With all due respect, I think this is a mixture of your misunderstanding what we mean and us badly communicating it. We/I do not mean whipping the blade with the flat, but rather the way that cuts are given in modern sport sabre with a sort of fly-fishing motion, which is is pretty easy to demonstrate does not really cut with a real sword (and is pretty difficult with a proper weight sabre). The way that cutting is taught in the British military sabre manuals is to make solid contact with the centre of percussion and then slice the remaining part of the blade across the object hit. This method of cutting works very well, but is not so advantageous in sport sabre, where you only really need to tag the person as quickly and from as far away as possible.
Dave B wrote:Some modern fencers are only interested in learning to win fights on the box, but thats not the entirity of modern fencing.
KeithFarrell wrote:Gordon L wrote:Originally, the only Olympic weapons were the fleuret and the sabre. The épée was added soon afterwards. Singlestick was an Olympic weapon briefly (iirc as a demonstration event - I'll confirm one way or the other if anyone wants). Rapier and dagger was also proposed as an Olympic event, but never formed part of the Olympics.
If you could confirm this about Olympic singlestick then I would be interested to hear the answer!
Cutlery Penguin wrote:Gordon L wrote:However if issues like aesthetics and ease of carrying/wearing play a part then that evolution, and the changes it dictates may well be a departure away from simple combat efficacy.
I'd say there's a world of difference between changes which may be a departure from simple combat efficiency, and changes which remove all "reality" and "even any attempt at reality".
Depends where on the path of evolution you are. At the beginning yes, 200 years later, possibly not.
admin wrote:Gordon L wrote:Oh, and one of my favourite factoids - on page two of "Cold Steel", Hutton recommends that you train with the light sabre - i.e. the things that I have heard variously derided as "those whippy car aerial things", or "Fairy sabres".
Sorry Gordon, but this is a misunderstanding on your part. Hutton is refering to the Italian style infantry officer's sabre. That is a proper sabre of just under 2lbs in weight - it is only light in comparison to a cavalry sabre. He bought them from Pillin and similar examples survive. It is a completely different beast to the modern fairy sabre.And (one of) my teacher's teacher(s), Royal Marines sword instructor and the European Military Sabre champion of around 1950, seemed happy to train with it, too.
Unfortunately the British Armed Forces switched from military forms of fencing to sport fencing (ie. sport sabre replaced military sabre, singlestick and cutlass) in around 1920, thanks to the realities of WW1 with its aeroplanes and tanks.
Gordon L wrote:Cutlery Penguin wrote:Gordon L wrote:However if issues like aesthetics and ease of carrying/wearing play a part then that evolution, and the changes it dictates may well be a departure away from simple combat efficacy.
I'd say there's a world of difference between changes which may be a departure from simple combat efficiency, and changes which remove all "reality" and "even any attempt at reality".
Depends where on the path of evolution you are. At the beginning yes, 200 years later, possibly not.
I'm not sure I understand this last point - are you saying that, 200 years after a change is made, any reality that change had has somehow evaporated?
Gordon L wrote:admin wrote:And (one of) my teacher's teacher(s), Royal Marines sword instructor and the European Military Sabre champion of around 1950, seemed happy to train with it, too.
Unfortunately the British Armed Forces switched from military forms of fencing to sport fencing (ie. sport sabre replaced military sabre, singlestick and cutlass) in around 1920, thanks to the realities of WW1 with its aeroplanes and tanks.
Singlestick was not replaced until the 50s. As I've already pointed out, neither was military sabre.
Gordon L wrote:Now that some others have moved us onto the subject of the light sabre - I'd like to correct a widely communicated misconception about them.
Used with proper technique, they do not flick.
They only flick if you attack with the flat of the blade, which is patently not a useful cut. (And in the days prior to electric scoring of Olympic-rules sabre, the president and judges would simply have ignored it).
The tendency towards flick-hitting In foil in the 1990s - (subsequently much-diminished now that the rules have been amended in order to get rid of it);
KevinMurakoshi wrote:Also, to respond to your history of the epee. The epee as a fencing weapon was developed in the mid 19th century by the French because they believed that foil had drifted too far from its dueling roots. If people who were actually fighting duels 150 years ago felt that it was so far removed from reality that they needed a whole new weapon, then the argument that foil has remained a martial weapon based on the smallsword is called into question.
admin wrote:In 1900 an epee fencer knew the context that although you could achieve a first hit by such a risky manouver, it would be highly silly to attempt to do so, as you would be risking a sword through the head and death merely to satisfy honour in a first-blood fight. That context, the one of preservation of life above scoring a risky hit, is now ignored in the name of sport.
KevinMurakoshi wrote:Gordon, I don't think that anyone is arguing that the sport fencing weapons have never had any martial applicability. I think what people are saying is that as they are practiced now they have lost much (if not all)of their martial applicability. As a result, what people are pointing out are issues with how the weapons are fenced now not they way they should be fenced, or were fenced 50 years ago.
To respond to a couple of your comments.Gordon L wrote:Now that some others have moved us onto the subject of the light sabre - I'd like to correct a widely communicated misconception about them.
Used with proper technique, they do not flick.
They only flick if you attack with the flat of the blade, which is patently not a useful cut. (And in the days prior to electric scoring of Olympic-rules sabre, the president and judges would simply have ignored it).
Yet, such a cut is rewarded in the current rules of sport saber. There is no provision in the rules of modern electric saber to ignore a touch indicated by the scoring apparatus, even if that touch is delivered with the flat of the blade. I know coaches coaching at the US national level that teach both the saber flick over, and cuts with the flat of the blade because they will score a touch.
The tendency towards flick-hitting In foil in the 1990s - (subsequently much-diminished now that the rules have been amended in order to get rid of it);
Yet the flick marching attack is still very present. It's clearly not as heinous as it was in the '90s, but it's still very much present in international competition.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QspDxl8QsO8 about 2:30. (And this is the first high level foil bout I could find on youtube.
Also, to respond to your history of the epee. The epee as a fencing weapon was developed in the mid 19th century by the French because they believed that foil had drifted too far from its dueling roots.
If people who were actually fighting duels 150 years ago felt that it was so far removed from reality that they needed a whole new weapon, then the argument that foil has remained a martial weapon based on the smallsword is called into question.
It should be noted that the Italians were late to adopt Epee. The Italian foil was traditionally taught very much with the duel in mind, and the epee was only really adopted for the Olympics. (Indeed Beppo Nadi forbid Aldo and Nedo from training or competing in it. They had to sneak out in order to do any epee fencing.
Gordon L wrote:to point out that the flick-hit was deliberately targetted by changes in the rules designed to attempt to control its use, and eliminate it, if possible
Chris Holzman wrote:Regarding Italian military practice sabres from Radaelli/Parise's time period on, I'd say something more like 600g to 640g is probably where most examples lie... Parise ... specifies that the sabre for fencing on the ground should be like the one used in the duel
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