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LongEdge Fencing

Check out the summary of Camillo Agrippa's single sword!

LongEdge Fencing concentrates on two area of period French swordsmanship. Use these pages the jumping off point for our interpretation of each.

If you're looking for the LongEdge Press website and publication catalog, it's over here: http://www.longedgepress.com.

We also have pages devoted to teaching materials used in LongEdge Fencing training sessions.


Early Modern (Rapier)

Sources

Each “author” page has a table listing the techniques in the text in a standard format. Soon, I'll be pulling all of these into a concordance and doing some analysis on which techniques are the most common, obviously, core, etc.

The sources which fall within the area of interest of LongEdge Fencing can be found on the List of Source Texts page, which includes summaries and some analysis/interpretation of them.

The main texts for the current project, handling the rapier alone, are listed here for convenience. These pages contain summaries of the basic actions and tactical advice in each text.

Other sources of particular interest include:

  • Camillo Palladini – largely a repetition and commentary on Agrippa
  • Charles Besnard – a text describing the use of something like a proto-smallsword.

 LEF - Timeline of Core Texts

Andre Des Bordes provides a cute aside to the whole project as he largely plagiarised Palladini almost word for word. In addition, he's the only known fencing master to be executed for witchcraft. We play a dangerous game.

In addition, there is a lot of useful info in later texts. In particular, Jean de Brye's 1721 Art of Fencing Reduced to a Methodical Summary provides good information about how to think about coaching this material.

Research Foci

We're still in the analysing and synthesising stage of researching these texts. The process is three-fold:

  1. Understand each text in itself
  2. Understand the similarities between the texts
  3. Understand the differences between the texts

Small essays on small topics:

Current topics causing continual puzzlement:

  • The “long lunge” versus the “short lunge”. Who prefers which type of lunge and why?
  • De Heredia's “long play” versus “short play”. Is this the same as the long vs short lunge? Or, is it the Italian-style “wide play” vs “close play”?
  • Does the “mathematical play” refer to LVD or to salle fencing (as opposed to fencing in earnest)?

The high-level strategy seems to be do something/anything to make the opponent move their feet.

  • Sword and Dagger: Thrust between the weapons to determine what the opponent will do then take advantage of their mistake.
  • Sword Alone: Subject the opponent's blade to force them to act (advance, retreat, change guard, etc) then take advantage of their mistake.

Archived Stuff

This stuff used to be on the front page. It's no longer relevant here.

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