Capoferro: Plate 8

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Capoferro: Plate 8

Summary

This plate established the classic problem of geometry posed by the attack to the leg. Against it, slip the leg and strike to the head or arm. Instead of cutting the leg, cut the head! But beware the counterattack into the cut shown on Capoferro: Plate 10...

You will find the same basic idea of taking advantage of the geometry of the cut to the leg versus cut to the head in the 7th play of the Second Master of the Fiore's Plays of the Zogho Largo, in I.33 (Update with wiki link) and indeed in many other systems.


Source Text and Drawing

Figures that Demonstrate How Much Measure is Lost by Attacking the Legs

The sword of the figure C being gained by the figure D, this same figure C turns a riverso to the leg of the figure marked as D. D is able to strike him during the turning of the riverso, with a stramazzone to the arm or a thrust to the face, as a consequence of his leaning too far forward; as the figure shows, the said figure D moreover draws his right leg back during the attack. Always, I say, that when D was stringering the sword of C, had C been a shrewd person, he would have given a riverso to the face followed by a mandritto fendente to the head and thus he would have been safer.

Plate Eight

Video


Legacy Wiki Video


Key Resources

Books: The Duellist's Companion

Workbooks: The Complete Rapier Workbook

Online courses: The Complete Rapier Course


Navigation

Previous: Capoferro: Plate 7 Next: Capoferro: Plate 9


Source: Gran Simulacro dell'Arte e dell'Uso della Scherma Translation: William Wilson and Jherek Swanger