i guess some of the moves are technicly elegent, but not optimal in a more aggressive sparring. i'm not saying all of it is low shite, all fightbook manuscripts have wierd and awkward moves sometimes, regardless of the weapon and period. i mean... even after 3 years of fiore, i rarely get to use all the stances and drills in my sparrings (just sometimes for the memes)
@@jacobzindel987 Throws are usually allowed. High altitude ones are dangerous in gear though, but most tournaments will allow any trips or low altitude throws. Punches are almost absent in historical sources, and it's overall not a great choice in a fencing match.
Hey late reply. My fencing teacher has a theory that I33 is actually a play written for German Halloween, i forgot what its called. I havent studied I33 but he thinks it more of a play rather than a how to.
I dont know much about sword and bucler, but in painting I have always seen them stand with the sword hand sine back and the foot of the other side to the front, I think it alsaw would be more efficiant
You must always answer with a thrust timed with a parry at the same time, you block and thrust at the same time. You can counter with that way down to the foot, or wounding the hand of your opponent. Countering is what gives the victory allways, check out the 1.33 treatise of sword and shield/buckler, it works almost but not all for both, for all you HEMA practitioners.
Is it just me or is this far more interesting to watch than longsword fencing?
Great match. Was wondering what maker did those arming swords come from?
I see very few matches where style resembles I33. Does anyone know of any videos featuring full speed I33 action?
i guess some of the moves are technicly elegent, but not optimal in a more aggressive sparring. i'm not saying all of it is low shite, all fightbook manuscripts have wierd and awkward moves sometimes, regardless of the weapon and period.
i mean... even after 3 years of fiore, i rarely get to use all the stances and drills in my sparrings (just sometimes for the memes)
I.33 has a very poor matchup vs Bolognese. It's too focused on the Stretta(Close).
@@vincentliu809 It seems like a lot of the competitive matches even ban throws and punches, too....
@@jacobzindel987 Throws are usually allowed. High altitude ones are dangerous in gear though, but most tournaments will allow any trips or low altitude throws. Punches are almost absent in historical sources, and it's overall not a great choice in a fencing match.
Hey late reply. My fencing teacher has a theory that I33 is actually a play written for German Halloween, i forgot what its called. I havent studied I33 but he thinks it more of a play rather than a how to.
Was that Roland Warzecha announcing the fighters?
I dont know much about sword and bucler, but in painting I have always seen them stand with the sword hand sine back and the foot of the other side to the front, I think it alsaw would be more efficiant
7:20 he could counter low i don't understand why limit oneself exclusively a linear fashion of offense and countering.
You must always answer with a thrust timed with a parry at the same time, you block and thrust at the same time.
You can counter with that way down to the foot, or wounding the hand of your opponent.
Countering is what gives the victory allways, check out the 1.33 treatise of sword and shield/buckler, it works almost but not all for both, for all you HEMA practitioners.
WOW that was intence
Cameraman sucks.