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Difference between revisions of "Ablauffen"

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== Primary Sources ==
 
== Primary Sources ==
 
 
  
 
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! id="thin" | <p>Images<br/>from the [[Kunst des Messerfechtens (Cgm 582)|Munich Version I]]</p>
 
! id="thin" | <p>Images<br/>from the [[Kunst des Messerfechtens (Cgm 582)|Munich Version I]]</p>
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{{#lst: Paulus Hector Mair | Credits2 }}
 
{{#lst: Paulus Hector Mair | Credits2 }}
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! <p>Images</p>
 
! <p>Images</p>

Revision as of 02:12, 4 June 2020

Ablauffen (Ablaufen, Running-Off or Flowing-Off) means to withdraw from or evade the opponent’s weapon by rotating the blade downwards around the hilt. It is one of several techniques featured in the Handworks section of longsword techniques in Joachim Meÿer's canon, and is also referenced in the longswoard and dussack sections of Paulus Hector Mair. The earliest appearance for Ablauffen is in the messer treatises of Johannes Lecküchner.

Primary Sources

Video Interpretations

{{#evp:youtube|Y9S9aB_2jsI| Luca C. (2013)|left}}

References

  1. weifen = fuchteln, schwingen, schwencken ( Grimm, Bd 28, Sp. 632, 5 )
  2. Haspel [Garnwinde] ( Hennig, S147 )
  3. doch
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  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named illustration-left