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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18 August 2020
Pecoraro defends the Parise method
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Despite losing its official status in the Italian army, the Radaellian method had no shortage of public supporters even at the end of the 19...
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:
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