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Martin Surdel wrote:Hi
CGM582 (Leckuchner) advises holding your off hand in front of your chest, if in-fighting is expected or planned. It's in the text (folio 2 recto), but not shown on illustrations.
Bill Welch wrote:In Talhoffer 1467 starting with tafel 223 it clearly shows the off hand firmly placed at the small of the back, and In Hans Lecküchner 1482 the pictures show the fighters their hands behind their backs.. Once they get in close to grappling distance the off hand comes into play.
Bill Welch wrote: I don't know about that, Meyer is full of grappling and offensive use of the off hand.
Martin Surdel wrote:Bill Welch wrote: I don't know about that, Meyer is full of grappling and offensive use of the off hand.
Seems I need to read Meyer properly, not just flip the pages ...
It is a good translation, but the Longsword section is incomplete it stops after fighting from longpoint, and then leaves out the next 40 something pages.Thanks, but transcription from Freifechter website will do.
Mike said that at the time The Meyer Project was going on and he thought they had a better shot at completing it. Then The Meyer Project fell apart and nobody finished it until Jeffery Forgeng. He completed the whole fight book, Longsword, Rapier (Meyer is really more cut and thrust than true rapier), Dusack, Dagger, Wrestling, Pike, halberd, quarter staff.Yes, I do not understand why those guys have left such a big gap in their text after so many years.
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