Master your footwork!
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- Опубліковано 5 лют 2025
- This is a reference video for footwork principles and techniques used in Historical European Martial Arts with 1 handed weapons. It's worth noting that there will be variations in most of these depending on the actual weapon being used. Rapier stances vs Saber stances for example differ a bit in their foot weighting and thus how these techniques may look in their particulars BUT despite this discrepancy and being demonstrated with the Rapier, the principles in this video I believe are applicable to many 1 handed European swords including Rapiers, Sabers, Small Swords and Side Swords to name a few.
This video is not representing a particular style. Different systems often have specific ways they instruct their students to move and not to move. These techniques and principles are presented as a general resource of useful footwork that can be adapted and utilized but not all belonging to a specific treatise or fencing system.
“We’ve covered a lot of ground today” 😁
Thanks! That is great material!
I’m writing a story where the antagonist primarily uses a rapier, these videos are a GOD SEND thank you so much
Happy to be of service. I truly appreciate a writer that's willing to look into the details of the art! So many books and movies are clearly written by people with no idea how a sword is supposed to be used.
@@resolvedinsteel writing it and these videos have gotten me so into the weapon as a whole, it’s so amazing
Preach it from the rooftops! It's unfortunate that a significant number of HEMA clubs don't give footwork enough attention.
We all grow together
True footwork is key to all martial movement. Eastern and western
Footwork is how I’ve won many fights before! I’ve done Olympic foil fencing for a few years before I switched over to HEMA and sometimes I feel it has given me a true edge over some of my pure HEMA peers. Many attacks I needn’t even bother blocking because through my footwork I can be secure in knowing the attack will miss
I also got my start in Foil. Just the training in footwork and the lunge is really quite useful for HEMA.
Footwork is so important that the whole school of Marcelli is based on it
If you can maintain your measure. it is YOU who gets to decide when you engage and when your opponent can or cannot engage. That's a strong position to be in.
@@resolvedinsteel Exactly! Staying in "Larga misura" also allows to play with the opponent at a safe distance
The most challenging thing is to program the muscle memory to move laterally under stress. In the heat of the battle, even though my brain knows I should take lateral steps, my natural instinct forces me to only take vertical steps. It's so frustrating because I'm practicing Destreza which involves a lot more lateral movements than the Italian.
My fencing days are long past - although I still have a Leon Paul 'steam' foil and its bag that are almost 50 years old :) I liked foil, loved epee and was OKish at sabre - Your video was great as a reminder of some of the things I was taught although a couple of things were new to me. Thank you.
I remember as a child sneaking into my parents closet to "borrow" my mother's old fencing foils. Many games of pirates with my brothers and those foils is probably the only reason I'm a fencer today. They're probably about 50 years old as well!
This is superb 👏 👌. My club mostly focuses on Silvers work and covers this in its foundation grades and continues on throughout them with advanced techniques. We use slightly different names, but other than that I recognise all the moves.
I have read much of Silver but never made a dedicated study of his system. Definitely one I need to get back to. Cheers!
Solid advice, nice stuff
Great video!
Thanks! : D
Very nice content, indeed!
Glad you enjoyed it
I like this video
I'm here thanks to Federico Malaguti
I'll sub because I like how you explain and show the movements
Gotta love Federico 😎
Hmm, so use the Retreating Crossover lunge when sparring YOU Nathan! The Feint Master!
Worth a try 😂
Its great to see more educational HEMA videos out there! Are you planning on making more basic/beginner lessons for people coming into the scene of HEMA?
That's certainly the plan. At the moment I'm mostly making reference videos for major parts of our curriculum to aid our students in studying. But they've proven to be far and away my most popular content XD so yes! There's much more to come.
Great instructional! 🍻
💪😎👍
Talking about footwork... what are those shoes?? I want them XD
Look for Futsal shoes, they're the best.
The steel should came first. Not simultaneousely with the feet, and even not after them.
Indeed! But I think people often mistake by how much. The sword should move before the foot, and the thrust should land before the foot. More than that and I feel like we're losing efficiency. Cheers!
Waiting for R34 to animate these lessons :)
ACHIEVEMENT: "Corn".
I noticed a nice steinbier mug in your house. Are you German?
I have a small amount of German blood, but not much. I do love steins, though, and I have a bunch of them.
@@resolvedinsteel I love them as well. Maybe I will buy some and drink with it in a bar. I've heard that Germans use them only for decoration, tho.
They're kinda old school. I really like them for drinking outside. Makes sure nothing gets in your drink. Cheers!
@@resolvedinsteel Oh, I see that if I drink in such mugs, I won't be alone!
What brand of shoes do you fence in?
They're Puma futsal shoes.
I disagree with you, the most important physical skill is hand and eye coordination, most manuals will only displace as a last resort,
Hand eye coordination is extremely valuable. No doubt. I would still go footwork for most important, but really it's both, plus a few others to make a good fencer. Cheers!
With the exception of the lunge I know all these movements from kickboxing and grappling. ................. Nothing new under the sun.
It's so true!
Fancy foot work means nothing when slogging through mud or trapped in a small room.
Yeah, you'd probably want to use other things in those situations. But In the situation you're in the open and fighting with swords... Footwork good!
But like wrestling/grappling still has footwork involved
So I don't think we should really not do any footwork practice since
it usually even in cumbersome terrain
will bring opportunities
@@Rogue_Zero You are try-harding.
@@gatocles99 was looking for good argument or learning knowledge but found none
Thanks a lot
@@Rogue_Zero You were looking for a good argument... toxic. Vampiric.
Yeah, I don't give out free knowledge to people who are too lazy to train or do any research on their own.