“I am the sword and I am lethal against any weapon; lances, axes and dagger are worthless against me. I can become extended or withdrawn; when I get near the opponent I can enter into close play, perform disarms and abrazare. My art is to turn and to bind; I am expert in defense and offense, and always strive to finish in those. Come against me and feel the pain. I am Royal, enforce justice, propagate goodness and destroy evil. Look at me as a cross, and I will give you fame and a name in the art of arms.” –Il Fior di Battaglia, folio 25r, Fiore dei Liberi, 1410 (tr. Tom Leoni)[1]

Introduction

Fiore dei Liberi’s il Fior di Battaglia, a medieval martial arts manuscript dated to 1410 in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum and catalogued as MS Ludwig XV 13, uses an innovative instructional design to teach the techniques and principles of L’Arte dell’Armizare (the Art of Arms). Among the features of this system is the organization of longsword guards (positions from which the fighter attacks, defends or counterattacks) into three classifications: Stabile, Pulsativa, and Instabile, or stable, striking, and mutable. Knowing the play of these three classifications of guards is an essential part of understanding Fiore’s strategy and tactics in the fight – in other words, the actual application of martial technique against an antagonistic opponent.

In order to better describe how the three types of guards are used strategically and tactically, I’ll first outline the pedagogical model of the manuscript, and then briefly outline the core elements of longsword play as taught by Fiore’s 24 First Masters on folios 22r through 24v. These masters teach lessons both specific to the sword and general to all weapons. For example, the four masters who teach the cuts and thrusts teach them for sword, axe and spear, but not for dagger, which are taught separately. Conversely, the First Masters of the armoured and mounted combat sections have lessons applicable to the sword, whether used single-handed or with both hands. The focus of this article is on the play of the longsword, but since the manuscript teaches an interconnected system, I will draw from its entirety.

Organization of il Fior di Battaglia

Instruction in L’Arte dell’Armizare is organized in sections based on the type of weapon employed (wrestling, dagger, sword, poleaxe, spear, in armour, on horseback). Within each section Fiore uses a system of marked figures to denote teachers, attackers, defenders, and counterattackers.[2] He also makes clear that his manuscript details a single holistic art, where principles and techniques established in one section with a particular weapon are shown to be present and useful, sometimes even necessary, in other sections of the manuscript, thus its self-referential nature. Examples include the use of abrazare (wrestling) where the formal plays are the foundational material for their use at other weapons, such as dagger, sword, in armor, and even on horseback. Key elements of these plays are called to our attention: the use of dagger defense techniques to assist in sword disarms, and in the notations of which plays are useful only in armoured fighting, or are equally useful both in and out of armour.

Fiore instructs his reader in how to interpret the manuscript in the introduction, in a section similar to the “how to use this book” sections of modern martial arts or sports instructional books. It is here that he defines the system of figures through which he teaches us his art. These figures, most of whom wear a crown, garter, or both, are:

First Masters – figures wearing gold crowns who stand unopposed. The First Masters show and discuss important martial principles, such as how to stand on guard, how to properly attack, choosing advantageous targets, and tactical instructions for fighting. [3]

Player – A figure who initiates attacks, and does not wear a crown, garter, or other device. Also known as the Companion.

Second Masters or Remedy Master – these figures also wear crowns, but are actively defending themselves from attack by the Player.

Scholar [4] – A figure who wears a gold garter his knee, and follows a particular Remedy Master, illustrating the plays (techniques) that stem from his remedy (defense).

– A figure who wears a gold garter his knee, and follows a particular Remedy Master, illustrating the plays (techniques) that stem from his remedy (defense). Third Master or Counter Master – A figure wearing both a crown and a garter who opposes the remedies and plays of a specific Remedy Master and all his Students.

Fourth Master or Counter to the Counter Master – This figure opposes the actions of the Counter Master. Fiore notes this is rare. No such figure is labelled in the Getty manuscript, though there are figures that appear to act as Fourth Masters. The Fourth Master is shown in the Novati facsimile of the Pisani-Dossi manuscript.

The masters and scholars also demonstrate the ways in which the various sections of the manuscript are related – wrestling techniques used in dagger fighting, dagger techniques used in sword fighting, and so forth. The interconnected nature of the manuscript extends not just to the performance of individual martial techniques, but to strategy and tactics as well.

For clarity in this article, I will refer to all attackers as Players, all defenders as Remedy Masters, all defenders who carry out a technique as Scholars, and all those who defeat the Remedy Masters as Counter Masters.

The commentaries of the First Masters clearly spell out the necessity of delivering either a powerful attack that puts the adversary on the defensive, or a deceptive attack that misdirects or deceives the adversary:

“This is Posta di Donna (Woman’s Guard), which can execute all seven strikes of the sword and defend against all of them. It can break all other guards with its great strikes. Posta di Donna Stabile.” (f. 23v)

“This is the Posta di Finestra (Window Guard), always quick to enact its tricks and deceptions. She has mastery of defenses and offenses. It can pick a good fight with all the guards, both the high and the low. It often goes from a guard to the other to deceive the opponent. It can deliver strong thrusts, and knows how to break and exchange them. Posta di Finestra Instabile.” (f. 23v, emphasis mine)

These masters also give considerable detail on possible modes of attack – great stress is laid on precisely how to attack. Delivering an attack will draw a response, and so we need to look carefully at Fiore’s instruction on the offensive, defensive and counteroffensive qualities of the poste (guards), and the cuts, thrusts, and evasions they execute. Since both Remedy Masters and Counter Masters are key tactical figures, it follows that they will have all the cuts and thrusts available for the attack and the defense, limited only by the qualities of their starting guards. They will also have full access to all cuts and thrusts when the swords are bound in the crossing of the blades by the Remedy Master’s defense, subject to tactical utility.

The Lessons of the 24 First Masters

The section of the manuscript on the use of the longsword opens with 24 First Masters who teach the fundamental, foundational principles, as well as techniques of the sword in two hands. These Masters represent the core longsword system: if all that survived of Fiore’s work were the folios containing these 24 masters, we would still have a robust and sophisticated system of longsword play. This core system is further strengthened by a series of follow-on lessons taught in the rest of the manuscript.

The Versatility of the Sword and the Strategies of Posta di Donna

The first eight First Masters teach the core elements of mechanics, tactics, and strategy. The first two and the final two stand in Posta di Donna (Woman’s guard) and begin the instruction on strategy and tactics by establishing the way in which guards interact:

“We are two guards and we are alike but we are contrary to one-another. As with all other guards in this art, alike guards are contrary to one-another, with the exception of the point guards (Posta Longa, Breve and mezza Porta di Ferro); with point guards, the most extended guard can reach the opponent first. Anyway, what one guard can do, its opposite also can. “ (f. 22r)

Alike guards opposing each other have equal capability, since “what one guard can do, its opposite also can,” they also can easily play against each other. The exception is the three guards that have the point in line – and note that Posta Finestra is not one of these three guards that have the point in line: it has it off line at an angle, which I will discuss in the play of the Instabile Guards, below.

The next six masters teach that the sword can be thrown like a lance, can beat away lances or swords thrown at it, can deliver long thrusts, can be held close to prevent deception, and can play against all weapons.[5] The overall lesson is that the sword is versatile, a lesson reinforced by the commentary that bridges the 24 First Masters that immediately follows the their specific lessons:

“I can become extended or withdrawn; when I get near the opponent I can enter into close play, perform disarms and abrazare. My art is to turn and to bind; I am expert in defense and offense, and always strive to finish in those.” (f. 25r)

The Three Turns of Sword and Body

The first two First Masters also teach three key movements of body and sword as the foundation of the art. These movements are used in all weapons forms in the manuscript, and are defined at this point in the manuscript because this is self-referential manuscript describing an integrated system. In contemporary martial arts terminology, “mechanics” refers to the core movement principles of body and weapon (if a weapon is involved). These are often referred to as “body mechanics” and “weapon mechanics.” Of these, Fiore teaches:

“These guards can perform a volta stabile and a mezza volta. A volta stabile lets you play forward or backward (from one side only), without moving your feet. A mezza volta is when you pass forward or backward, letting you play on the opposite side forward or backward respectively. A tutta volta is when you use one foot to describe a circle around the other foot; in other words, one foot stays in place, the other circles around it. The sword also has three kinds of movements: volta stabile, mezza volta and tutta volta.” (f. 22r, emphasis mine)

The Seven Blows of the Sword

There are four First Masters who teach seven types of blows of the sword: six cuts and a thrust, and the thrusts are further subdivided into the five angles they can make. Each has specific strategic and tactical applications in the art.

The Six Cuts

Fendente – a downward blow delivered at a sharp angle; targets are head, torso, arms and hands

Sottano – an upward blow that takes the same path as the fendente; targets are knees, thighs, torso, arms, hands and head

Mezzano – a middle blow, which is any cut that is not a fendente or a sottano, and can strike any target above the knees

Each of the three can be delivered from both right and left sides, thus giving six cuts of the sword.

The Five Thrusts

“We are the thrusts—cruel and lethal. Our path is through the center of the body, and can be anywhere between the crotch and the forehead. We thrusts are divided into five types: two high thrusts (one on each side), two low thrusts (also one on each side), and a middle one delivered from the middle Porta di Ferro, Posta Longa or Posta Breve.” (f. 23r)

Only the middle thrust is delivered from the middle guards, two of which are Stabile guards (see below), leaving the angled thrusts to come from or while passing through other guards. One angled thrust is detailed in an action in the largo section called scambiar de punta or exchange of thrust; this action is taught as the basis for the other exchanges, which are referred to in the various guards that make them. They are also part of the play of the spear on folios 39r, 39v, and 40r.

The 12 Guards of the Sword

The 12 First Masters who teach the guards, the qualities and their actions are laid out four to a page, in the way Fiore outline in his introduction: “Some guards will be set against one another and will not touch one another, studying each other to see what the opponent may do. “ From this we can infer that there are six key pairings of guards and that their interactions teach core principals of the play of the sword (and all other weapons). Before we look at these six pairings (below), we need to understand the three types of guards, the three modes of offense, the modes of defense and counteroffense, and the key lessons of the largo and stretto plays.[6]

Key Lessons of the Wide & Close Play

The 24 First Masters are followed by two sections taught by Remedy Masters and their Scholars: the plays of zogho largo, or wide play, and the plays of zogho stretto, or close play. The Largo and Stretto sections – whose Remedy and Counter Masters are subordinate to the First Masters that precede them – do two things: they demonstrate the principles (but not every possible example) of the crossing resulting from the defensive action of the Remedy Master, and they teach the transition from wide play to close play. Wide play is that body of technique that is used when the blades are crossed at the mezza spada or middle, and the sword can be used to cut or thrust at the opponent. It also applies to those techniques that avoid the adversary’s sword entirely while striking with cut or thrust. Close play is that body of techniques that is applicable when the swords are crossed at or below the middle, and one or both combatants can employ grappling techniques, including the use of the sword as a wrestling tool.[7]

The core lessons of zogho largo are:

Tempo, or time required to execute a single action. From the Morgan manuscript:

“These two masters are here crossed at full-sword. And each can do what the other does, that is, that one can make all plays of the sword with the crossing. But the crossing is of three types which are full-sword (tutta spada) and point-of-sword (punta della spada). And the one who is crossed at full-sword cannot stay long. And the one who is crossed at mid-sword (mezza spada) can stay less. And the one who is at point-of-sword cannot stay at all.” (translation Greg Mele)

From the first Remedy Master of Wide Play, who crosses above the middle of the sword near the point (weak): Thrust through when the pressure is weak and the line is open Cut over when the pressure is strong the the line closed

From the second Remedy Master of Wide Play, who crosses at the middle of the sword:

When the pressure is neutral, cut to the hands and then thrust; or stay on the sword and cut to the face or arms. [8]

When the pressure is strong, neutralize it by opposing the weak of the adversary’s sword. [9]

Cut over or around the opposing sword when the pressure is strong and the line is closed.

Against the overly strong opponent, evade the blow while closing the line and redirecting the adversary’s blow with an opposition of the swords, making a full turn of your sword around his and playing to his outside line.

Against a thrust, either:

Counterattack with an exchange of your thrust into his [10]

If the thrust misses or is tactically inadvisable, defend by breaking the thrust with a cut, and use the second tempo to riposte

Feints are employed with a committed first action that draws the necessary response

Feints can be countered by interrupting the tempo of their second action

From the Remedy Master of Close Play, who crosses above the middle of the sword near the point (weak): When you cross at the mezza spada or below, be prepared to enter into or defend against close play [11]

These lessons are not limited in scope but can be employed generally:

“Here ends the wide play of the two-handed sword. These plays are all linked, and have remedies and counters both from the mandritto (forehand) and riverso (backhand) side, counter-thrusts and counter-cuts to each action, with breaks, parries, strikes and binds—all things that can be understood very, very easily.” (f. 27v)

Offense, Defense and Counter-offense

The First Masters teach a variety of methods for probing, attacking, defending and counterattacking. These methods, with examples drawn from the guards, are:

Probe Use of the Instabile guards for reconnaissance to “seek openings,” ie, to discover the tendencies of the opponent (Remedy) and subsequently exploit them. Posta Longa Instabile (Long Guard)“can probe the opponent’s guards to see if it can deceive them.”

Attack Direct attack with a fendente from Posta di Donna, through the sword and to the man so as to break the guard. Thrusts from Stabile and Instabile guards as direct attacks. Posta Longa “can strike with a thrust” and we are taught that the other Instabile Poste can do what Longa does as well.

Deceive Use of cuts and thrusts to draw a specific response and strike to another opening. Posta Finestra Instabile (Window Guard)“can pick a good fight with all the guards, both the high and the low. It often goes from a guard to the other to deceive the opponent.”

Defend Simple parries with the sword resulting in an incrosada. Posta Longa can parry “any kind of attack;” Posta Frontale (Frontal Guard) is “is good for crossing the opponent’s sword, as well as against thrusts.” Breaking cuts and thrusts. Mezza Porta di Ferro (middle Iron Door) ( “beats away attacks low-to-high;” Tutta Porta di Ferro (Full Iron Door) can“beat thrusts to the ground.” Evasions. The play of the Colpo di Villano (Peasant’s Strike), teaches how to evade an overly strong, overly committed blow. The name refers to a rough, untutored fighter who strikes only with strength, and not with skill.

Counterattack Exchanging thrusts, as noted in many of the guards. Attacking the exposed hands and arms of the adversary from Dente de Cinghiaro (Boar’s Tooth).



The Three Classifications of Guards

Fiore classifies the poste (guard positions) into the three categories of pulsativa, stabile and instabile. These notations appear in red ink above the 12 guards of the two-handed sword. The six guards of the sword used in armour and the first two of the six guards of the poleaxe also have notation in red ink, but without the 3 classifications. They appear to be inscribed by a different hand than the paragraphs of explanatory text (it is common in medieval manuscript production to have more than one scribe or artist involved), and there is clearly space left for them in these cases, even where there is no legend inscribed. Only the dagger guards (which are all forms of Porta di Ferro), the unnamed guard of the sword in one hand, and the axe guard at lower right on 35 verso do not have sufficient space for these inscriptions.[12]

The poste are first discussed in the introduction to the manuscript, and as mentioned earlier, it states:

“A posta is the same as a guard. A guard (or posta) is what you use to defend or ‘guard’ yourself against the opponent’s attacks. A posta (or guard) is a ‘posture’ against the opponent, which you use to injure him without danger to yourself. “

The adjectives that classify the poste are as follows:

Pulsativa is an adjective deriving from the infinitive “pulsare,’’ to beat or to pulsate[13], in this context, pulsativa transalates as “striking.”

Stabile translates readily as “stable,” and one common compound form is “posizione stabile,” or “stable position.”

Instabile requires a little more work to translate. An easy translation is “unstable,” which in English carries the connotations of “not fixed, firm, or steady; easily upset or unbalanced.”[14] None of these are particularly desireable martial qualities in a guard position and it would be a curious system that relied on guards that were unstable in this sense.[15]

More likely Italian usages in this context are “changeable,” or “mutable,” “variable,” and even “volatile.” Instabile is often used to describe dancers or music, not as unsteady, but as mutable, variable, or volatile. Historically this use has not changed since at least the time of Dante. [16]

The Play of the Pulsativa Guards

The Pulsativa guards primarily take strategic roles in the play of the longsword: they are capable of strong offensive and equally strong defensive postures.

The two variants of Posta di Donna seize the initiative. They are both characterized by the powerful strikes they can make and their ability to break the other guards. Right Posta di Donna (Woman’s Guard) “can break all other guards with its great strikes.” Breaking a guard in this context doesn’t necessarily mean smashing through it with brute force – Fiore is very specific about the futility of brute force and the means to defeat it in his play of the Colpo di Villano (Peasant’s Strike). Instead, it seizes the initiative with those powerful strikes, and breaks guards by forcing a defense or a retreat from the Remedy Master.

Left Posta di Donna shares many characteristics with the right, and can also take the fight to the adversary, but is subtly different in that its specialty is easily entering close play, where grappling techniques can be used. While both Poste can enter close play, she excels at it.

Tutta Porta di Ferro (full Iron Door) is distinguised by powerful defenses rather than powerful attacks, and like the Stabile Guards it can wait and defend, making strong parries or counterattacks[17], and using specific footwork to close in on the Player. Like left Posta di Donna it comes quickly to close play. It differs from the Stabile Guards in the strength it has and the variety of actions it employs: despite the emphasis strength, Fiore says that it defends “without much effort against anyone picking a fight with it.” Where Donna seizes the initiative, Tutta Porta di Ferro retakes it.

In either case, if the offense or defense is not immediately successful, the result will be a bind, a crossing of the swords (incrosada in Italian). At this point the Player – who is no longer in a Pulsativa guard but in one of the Instabile guards – must use the lessons of the Counter Masters to act from this position and counter the Remedy Master. And the Remedy Master, if countered, must use the lessons of the Counters to the Counter, though Fiore says that this is rare.

The Play of the Stabile Guards

Stabile guards have defensive, offensive, and counteroffensive properties. Four of the five guards have the point of the weapon low to the ground, and all of them are withdrawn from potential contact with the adversary/Remedy Master. While they can deliver effective attacks, they are not poised for powerful strikes, as are the Pulsativa guards. All of them emphasize thrusts as their initial attacks, with cuts either immediately following the thrust or used as an alternative to the thrust.

Porta di Ferro Mezzana’s (middle Iron Door) dominant quality is that it is dangerous to break, not unexpected in a guard with the point low and in line: it can easily deliver thrusts into any incoming attack, and if that attack is poorly timed or is made foot or body first, the thrust can be deadly.

Posta Breve (Short Guard) is labeled as a Stabile Guard, but Fiore then says “it is a deceitful guard that has no stability.” This is discussed further below.

Dente de Cinghiaro (Boars’ Tooth) is named because it attacks with upward thrusts, as does a boar with its lower teeth. It has strong counteroffensive qualities. It attacks the hands and arms with thrusts from the left side followed by cuts, meaning that it is used when the adversary’s hands and arms are exposed while attacking or while probing (see The Play of the Instabile Guards, below).[18]

Posta di Coda Lunga (Long Tail Guard) is presented as a versatile guard that is good for waiting, and shares many physical and strategic characteristics with the pulsativa guard Posta Tutta Porta di Ferro. She is less strong, but more easily shifts to other guards.

Finally, Dente de Cinghiaro lo Mezzano (middle Boar’s Tooth) is a withdrawn version of the other Boar’s Tooth: it does everything the other guard can, but from a “refused” or back stance position. This gives it an advantage in playing measure.

The Play of the Instabile Guards

The Instabile Guards are the guards that actually make contact with the adversary’s sword, or occupy the space in front of him. They result from a transition from either Pulsative or Stabile guards via a cut, thrust, or probing action. All the other guards are withdrawn, poised and ready to act, but the Instabile Guards are characterized by volatility, variability and movement. They are described as being able to probe the adversary’s position, to deceive, and to make thrusts and cuts. These cuts and thrusts can be done directly from the guards and are not the transitions mentioned above. Since they are extended positions and make contact with the opposing steel, they play directly from various crossing of the swords. The mutable, changeable nature of these guards means that they must be sensitive to the pressures of the Remedy Master’s sword, the lines of potential attack that sword closes and opens (the Remedy can only close one line at a time), and the time necessary to act.

Posta di Finestra (Window Guard), is a versatile guard: “always quick to enact its tricks and deceptions. She has mastery of defenses and offenses. It can pick a good fight with all the guards, both the high and the low. It often goes from a guard to the other to deceive the opponent. It can deliver strong thrusts, and knows how to break and exchange them.”

Finestra is often interpreted to have the point on line, aimed at the adversary, and certainly this is a useful position that can easily be adopted at need. But I interpret, based on the visual evidence as well as Fiore’s citing only three guards as having the point in line: Posta Longa, Posta Breve, and mezza Porta di Ferro. Such a position better suits the deceptive nature of Finestra, allowing use of the sword’s natural mechanical properties to strike and deceive (see video below).

Mechanics of Posta Finestra:

Posta Longa (Long Guard) probes the adversary’s position, deceives, thrusts, cuts and avoid cuts. Fiore characterizes the guard as being the most deceptive of all the guards.

Posta Breve (Short Guard) occupies a curious position: it is classified as a Stabile guard, but we are then taught that “it is a deceitful guard, which has no stability. (emphasis mine) .” The distinction lies in Breve’s position of point withdrawn but with the point raised to threaten the adversary, rather than withdrawn and low to the ground. Breve “remains in motion and probes the opponent for an opportunity to thrust and pass forward.” These qualities are shared by Posta Longa.

Posta di Bicorno (Two-horned Guard) is formed with the left hand having a reverse grip on the pommel and the pommel held tight to the right arm. This gives it strong lateral stability, so that the guard “stays closed so that the point stays on the centerline.”

Posta Frontale (Frontal Guard), “which some masters call the Guard of the Crown.” Frontale is used for parrying the adverary’s cuts and thrusts, but also can be used as an position of invitation, from which the Remedy can counterattack to the head and arms or beat the opposing blade down. This is good for crossing the opponent’s sword, as well as against thrusts.

All of these guards are described as deceitful, and all do what Posta Longa can do: remain in motion, probe the opponent’s guards, thrust, avoid cuts, and deliver cuts. Posta di Bicorno adds the characteristic of great lateral strength of the point; it “stays closed so that the point stays on the centerline.” Posta Frontale is particularly strong at crossing thrusts, or beating the to the ground. Finestra deceives in her transitions rom guard to guard.

Use of Cuts and Thrusts from Instabile Guards

Nowhere does Fiore say that his cuts and thrusts, as taught by the four First Masters on folio 23 recto of the Getty manuscript, can only be made as opening attacks, and that the only possible plays from the crossing are the formal largo and stretto plays. Instead, he gives all the building blocks necessary to construct tactical applications when playing Instabile: crossings of the sword, pressures on the blade, the angles of thrusts, the nature of cuts, the means to close to stretto.

What is critical to understanding their play is this: they do these things both without and with contact of the opposing blade. Thus they can thrust from the bind, cut from the bind, and escape from the bind to threaten other targets with cuts and thrusts.

Strategic Lessons of the Six Guard Pairings

Fiore divides his 12 guards into 6 pairings of two, each opposed to the other, as stated in the introduction to the Getty:

“Some guards will be set against one another and will not touch one another, studying each other to see what the opponent may do. These are called poste, or guards, or First Masters of the fight. They will be wearing a crown, meaning that the position in which they wait is optimal for defense. These guards are also the foundation for carrying arms while in guard.”

In addition, the Morgan copy states:

“Posta means guarding oneself against the opponent, which is why saying posta or guard is the same as to say strength, because it is hard to break the guards without danger, as you come forward with intent.”

The Masters in these guard pairings teach fundamental strategic lessons necessary to the longsword – and to all other weapons – to use strong positions to break strong positions. But the since the strengths of these guards are different from each other, Fiore’s First Masters teach us how they interact. These lessons are:

Pulsativa breaks Pulsativa.

Pulsativa breaks Instabile.

Instabile deceives Pulsativa.

Stabile defends against or contends with Instabile

Instabile deceives Stabile.

Stabile contends with Stabile.

The actions outlined in the videos below are suggestive, not exhaustive, of the tactical possibilities inherent in the strategic positions. In future articles I will go into more detail on the various tactical applications taught in the system. Fiore teaches a variety of possibilities from each guard, and the intersection of these possibilities affords a variety of options.[19] Examining them in more detail:

Posta Tutta Porta di Ferro Pulsativa vs. Right Posta di Donna Pulsativa

Pulsativa breaks Pulsativa Longa plays defensive strength against offensive strength. Donna plays offensive strength to break defensive strength.



Posta di Finestra Instabile vs. Left Posta di Donna Pulsativa

Instabile deceives Pulsativa Finestra employs probes and deceptions to discover openings and attack

Pulsativa breaks Instabile Donna will play its offensive strength to break Finestra’s position and force a defense.



Posta Longa Instabile vs. Porta di Ferro Mezzana Stabile

Length of reach (both of swords and swordsman’s arms) is a factor: “…alike guards are contrary to one-another, with the exception of the point guards (Posta Longa, Breve and mezza Porta di Ferro); with point guards, the most extended guard can reach the opponent first.”

Assuming relative parity of reach, the strategic lessons are:

Instabile deceives Stabile Longa employs probes and deceptions to discover openings and attack

Stabile defends against Instabile Porta di Ferro Mezzana plays defensively, seeking beat away the attacking blade



Assuming one has a greater advantage of reach, that guard will have the decided offensive advantage in this pairing. The strategic lesson then becomes:

When faced with a disadvantage of reach, do not employ a point-based strategy.

Posta Breve Stabile vs. Dente di Cinghiaro Stabile

Stabile contends with Stabile Breve remains reserved because of the danger to the hands posed by Cinghiaro. It will “remain in motion and probe the opponent for an opportunity to thrust and pass forward;” it will simultaneously play defense against Cinghiaro’s offense. Cinghiaro will seek to strike with a thrust at an angle from below, timing its attack to negate Breve’s parry or exchange of thrust.



Posta di Coda Lunga Stabile vs. Posta di Bicorno Instabile

Stabile defends against Instabile Coda Lunga will seek to pass forward with a fendente and enter close play: Bicorno’s firm position in the center will allow for entry into zogho stretto from the incrosada.

Instabile deceives Stabile Bicorno will use its position on the center to close the line and thrust through the fendente (somehting this guard excels at); or will probe to draw a fendente or thrust and evade it.



Posta Frontale Instabile vs. Dente de Cinghiaro lo Mezzano Stabile

Instabile deceives Stabile Frontale can counter the low thrust by passing out of line and beating the thrust to the ground.

Stabile contends with Instabile This final pairing shows a second possibility for Stabile vs Instabile: Frontale doesn’t initiate attacks but rather counterattacks. Cichiaro lo Mezzano (which is equivalent to Cinghiaro) will draw the counterattack with its thrust – which comes from a further distance due to the refused posture – and counter it with the fendente to the head and arms, followed by additional thrusts with a step of the front foot.



Conclusion

The classifications of the poste into Stabile, Pulsativa and Instabile denote the strategic positions the guards occupy – what role in the fight they are best suited for. Analyzing the interaction of these overall strategic possibilities as taught by Fiore illuminates the tactical play of the guards and what actions they can specifically employ in all phases of the fight: offense, defense, counteroffense, and counters to the counteroffense. Further, the actions of the seven blows of the sword can be employed not only as offensive and defensive actions, but also as counteraction arising either from the incrosada or the attempted incrosada. Feints that deceive the parry, or opposition and angulated thrusts or cuts that arise directly from the incrosada are a key element of Fiore’s play. It is not a wait-and-defend system, but a strategically and tactically robust and sophisticated system of marital arts.

[1] All translations are taken from Il FIor di Battaglia: Second English Edition, Tom Leoni, 2012. Available through Freelance Academy Press.

[2] For a detailed explanation of the system of Masters and Students, see Fiore dei Liberi’s Armizare:The Chivalric Martial Arts System of Il Fior di Battaglia, Robert N. Charrette, Freelance Academy Press, September 2011. This volume should be on the bookshelf of every practicing martial artist

[3] Fiore says of the First Masters that they “will be set against one another and will not touch one another, studying each other to see what the opponent may do.” But there are masters who do not stand in guard this way and who are neither Remedy Masters nor Counter Masters. Bob Charrette refers to them as “Instruction Masters.” For simplicity’s sake I will refer to all of the masters who are not Remedy or Counter Masters as “First Masters,” as Fiore gives no other name for them.

[4] “Scolaro” more accurately translates to “student” in this context, but “Scholar” is usually used by modern practitioners of the art.

[5] Throwing a weapon is not as unusual as it might seem: in the context of a judicial duel, where the opponents have access to multiple weapons, a thrown sword can prove a useful opening move.

[6] “Counteroffense” is a fencing specific term: it is single action which attacks into the adversary’s attack with the intention of negating the attack and hitting in a single motion, The classic defensive response, the parry and riposte, is two actions: the first action negates the attack and the second action is intended to strike.

[7] There are other factors that play into this distinction that are beyond the scope of this article. See Wide and Close Play in Armizare, the Martial Tradition of Fiore dei Liberi, by Gregory Mele. https://chivalricfighting.wordpress.com/2014/04/13/wide-and-close-play-in-armizare-the-martial-tradition-of-fiore-dei-liberi/

[8] The cut to the face is detailed in Fillipo Vadi, who is in the dei Liberi tradition and whose manuscript is extensively based on one of the Fiore manuscripts. Vadi’s major contribution is his extensive theory section preceding the illustrated guards and plays in his manuscript, where he details this action.

[9] My colleague Gregory Mele argues that Fiore shows a manual opposition – a seizure of the weak with the left hand – by the Scholar of the Remedy due to the left foot forward body position, and the short tempo and presence of the adversary’s point dictates a seizure with the left hand.. I argue that the turn of the sword up is simply a thrust from one of the four angles dictated earlier, and that the manual seizure of the sword shown is a speciality action that facilitates the cut to the hands and the leg break as shown in the 5th and 6th plays of largo. In any case, we are both agreed on the mechanics and tactics of the interpretations, differing only on where in the pedagogical model we place them.

[10] In classical and contemporary fencing, a counterattack by definition is done in a single tempo, rather than the two tempi of a parry-riposte. I have adopted use of this term to describe Fiore’s action.

[11] There are additional considerations, such a body position and foot placement, that inform this lesson, but are beyond the scope of this article.

[12] The lack of these notations in all guards, particularly the uncompleted poleaxe guards, is one of several indications that this manuscript may be a not-quite-completed copy of another manuscript. Full discussion of this is far outside the scope of this article.

[13] The Collins English Dictionary defines the intransitive verb “pulsate” as to beat, throb, or vibrate.

[14] Collins American English Dictionary.

[15] Instabile as applied to Fiore’s guards has often been taken to “positions which the fighter cannot remain in for very long,” because they are seen as hard to maintain for any extended period of time. In fact, Posta Finestra is no harder to hold for an extended period than is Posta di Donna, a pulsativa guard.

[16] Personal communication on 3/20/2014 with Dr. Nathalie Hester, Associate Professor of Italian, Department of Romance Languages, University of Oregon: “I like your translation as mutable/changeable. You’ll see, in the examples below from the dictionary for the Accademia della Crusca, that the focus is on mutability and unpredictability (or variability).”

[17] Attacks into the attack. See note above on counteroffense.

[18] This is similar to Fillipo Vadi’s description of his “new” footwork. See Arte Gladiatoria Dimicandi: 15th Century Swordsmanship of Master Fillipo Vadi by Fillipo Vadi, Luca Porzio and Gregory Mele, Chivalry Bookshelf 2002.

[19] Both the Morgan and the Pisani-Dossi copies of the manuscript have slightly different guard pairings, and neither of them has any notation of Pulsativa, Stabile or Instabile. Both manuscripts omit the guard of Dente de Cenghiaro lo mezzano, and substiture another instance of Posta di Donna. The Pisani-Dossi appear to nis-name one of the guards. However, the same strategic lessons based on the three guard classifications with only slight variation from the Getty can be derived.