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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!charnel!rat!ucselx!crash!ziggys!cobra
- From: cobra@ziggys.cts.com 619/262-6384 (Ron Lee)
- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Subject: Re: Savate
- Message-ID: <48PewB1w165w@ziggys.cts.com>
- Date: 26 Dec 92 20:46:26 GMT
- References: <725174873.AA07224@urchin.fidonet.org>
- Organization: Ziggy's Den Of Iniquity, East of East SD CA
- Lines: 52
-
- Stovall@f88.n106.z1.fidonet.org (Stovall) writes:
-
- } PH>Apparently the practice of foot-fighting arose among the rougher
- } PH>elements of French society around 1800, for reasons that are
- } PH>unclear; around 1820, someone...systematized this practice...
- }
- } It seems I read somewhere that it was a serious offense to strike
- } someone with your hand back then, so the baser elements developed
- } a form of foot fighting. Then again, the story might be apocryphal.
- }
- } Happy holidays,
- }
- } Tom
- }
- } ___
- } X SLMR 2.1a X ...noli permetere illigetimi carborundum
- }
-
- Back when I was in High School, I was a Green Belt in karate and joined
- the fencing club at the High School....
- I had asked the instructor (jokingly) why I couldn't parry an attack
- and kick my opponent in the chest. She told me that Savate was the
- art I was thinking of, but it wasn't allowed on competitive strips...
-
- Savate was developed with the latter developments of Sword-making
- technology, when the metal was strong enough to be relatively thin
- and narrow, yet still hold an edge or block a strike. Another advantage
- was that, after an attempted strike, the weight of the weapon wouldn't
- drag it's wielder off balance and staggering ten yards away....
-
- With greater balance under control, it was easy enough to start engaging
- the feet for more than simply making sure the body stayed off the ground.
- Kicking was added to the "game".
-
- The hands are not used in Savate (actually, they are now, but not
- emphasized) because it is assumed (by tradition?) that the Savateur
- (smirk) is holding a blade in his hands (saber/sabre, rapier...perhaps
- also a main gauche). By a similar assumption, kicks in Savate are
- typically circular -- a straight, thrusting kick is likely to end up
- with your foot spitted on your opponents blade!
-
- For a great example of this type of swordplay, take a look at
- _The Three Musketeers_ and _The Four Musketeers_ both classic
- films with the early work of Richard Chamberlain, Charlton Heston,
- and a whole host of great actors. It shows some early Savate-ish
- fighting, along with the usage of main gauche and weighted cloak.
- This is how fencing was really done, not the sport stuff on the narrow
- strip!
-
-
- cobra@ziggys.cts.com - BBS (619)262-6384
- Ziggy's Den Of Iniquity
-