Radaellian Scholar
Highlights
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An introduction to Radaelli sabre
Hutton on Safari
Generoso Pavese: champion or charlatan?
The Right Tool for the Job
Austro-Hungarian fencing sabres in the 1890s
Binding the Sword
Radaelli Under Fire
Visualising the Italian fencing lineage
Refining the molinelli
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12 July 2020
Alfred Hutton, Masiello, and the 'Italian' lunge
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When consulting historical fencing sources, one should give extra scrutiny to any broad claims made regarding fencing outside the author...
2 comments:
28 June 2020
The Right Tool for the Job
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We interrupt your regular broadcast to announce that an article of mine has just been published here on the Melbourne Fencing Society's...
18 June 2020
The republication of Marchionni's 1847 treatise
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Alberto Marchionni's Trattato di scherma was the first work to be published explicitly discussing the 'mixed' school of fencing...
11 May 2020
Translation - Sinossi della scherma di sciabola by Antonio Tinti
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In the period of history focused on in this blog, it is not often that one encounters a text without a named author or date of publication. ...
11 April 2020
La Scherma di Fioretto by Ferdinando Masiello
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Considered by many to be the leader of the Radaellian school of fencing in the decades following the death of its founder, Ferdinando Mas...
4 comments:
20 March 2020
Translation - Lezioni collettive di spada e sciabola by Eugenio Pini
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Eugenio Pini is one of the most famous names in modern Italian fencing history, perhaps second only to Aldo Nadi. He was undoubtedly the fir...
4 comments:
23 February 2020
La Scherma della Sciabola e del Bastone a Due Mani by Alberto Falciani
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Seeing as it has been a while since I have made public any original fencing treatises, I thought I should get around to completing a transcr...
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