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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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the late Renaissance as a personal dueling tool. Most popular in the 1700s,<br />

they are sometimes confused with rapiers. <strong>The</strong>y consisted almost exclusively<br />

of a sharp pointed metal rod with a much smaller guard than the<br />

rapier and finger-rings. <strong>The</strong> blade was typically a hollow triangular or<br />

lozenge shape much thicker at the hilt and tapering to a hardened needlelike<br />

point. Most had no edge at all, and were merely rigid, pointed, metal<br />

rods. <strong>The</strong>y were popular with the upper classes especially as decorative<br />

fashion accessories, worn like jewelry. However, in a skilled hand the smallsword<br />

was an effective and deadly instrument. Until the early 1800s, it continued<br />

to be used even against older rapiers and even some cutting swords.<br />

<strong>The</strong> small-sword rather than the rapier led to the épée and foil of<br />

modern sport fencing. <strong>The</strong> small-sword was a more poised, somewhat formalized,<br />

dueling weapon. It became the gentleman’s weapon of choice in<br />

duels of honor during an age when the sword as a weapon of war was well<br />

past its prime and an exclusively thrusting style of swordsmanship had become<br />

a combat form in its own right. In the middle of the nineteenth century,<br />

this combat system was transformed into the genteel “sport of fence,”<br />

and the small-sword was adapted into the light, flexible, modern sport versions.<br />

<strong>The</strong> classical small-sword, though often disregarded as a weapon of<br />

martial study, is a deceptively violent and effective little tool, exceptionally<br />

quick, accurate, and easy to underestimate. It was intended primarily for<br />

codified dueling and not for facing other weapons in freestyle brawling (although<br />

such combats did occur).<br />

Modern sport fencing has far more in common with this humble<br />

weapon than it does with rapiers or any earlier Renaissance swords. Modern<br />

fencing “weapons” were never real swords. Modern fencing tools are<br />

much lighter, softer, and faster than these historical weapons. <strong>The</strong> contrived<br />

rules of play create a specialized sport that observes its own rules and constraints<br />

and has very little to do with any elements of Renaissance swordsmanship.<br />

Real rapiers, being heavier, stiffer, and sturdier than today’s<br />

sporting weapons, cannot be used in the same manner as the implements<br />

of modern sport fencing—and vice versa.<br />

Despite the emphasis on the rapier from the mid-sixteenth through the<br />

late seventeenth centuries, the early Renaissance weapons should not be<br />

viewed exclusively as primitive “proto-rapiers” around which developed a<br />

less sophisticated or less effective fighting art. Renaissance cut-and-thrust<br />

methods were complete systems in their own right. <strong>The</strong> systems of personal<br />

combat described by early Renaissance Masters of Defence and the swords<br />

they favored were practical, fully developed, highly effective, and successful.<br />

Renaissance fighting men were required to face the cold reality of violent<br />

death, and their lives very often depended upon the sudden and immediate<br />

use of personal skill at arms. From literary, artistic, and archaeo-<br />

Swordsmanship, European Renaissance 585

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