Nineteenth Century French Military Sabre

Numerous treaties and methods regarding fencing are known today, either written by experts, veterans of sword-masters, or by the ministry or war and its branches: the schools of Joinville and Saumur. Some are destined to horse riders, others to officers. Each of these methods has its own particulari...

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Main Author: Julien Garry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2020-10-01
Series:Acta Periodica Duellatorum
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/apd/article/view/7206
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author Julien Garry
author_facet Julien Garry
author_sort Julien Garry
collection DOAJ
description Numerous treaties and methods regarding fencing are known today, either written by experts, veterans of sword-masters, or by the ministry or war and its branches: the schools of Joinville and Saumur. Some are destined to horse riders, others to officers. Each of these methods has its own particularities and, due to the abundance of treaties, discerning the qualities, the flaws, and the overall interest of a specific method can seem complicated. An attempt is made below to answer: why were the methods of French saber in the nineteenth century conceived and Why were they made this way, and what connection do they share with the French military world. These texts are compared and analyzed to uncover their function regarding the Army. From this analysis, three types of fencing will emerge, sometimes opposite, sometimes complementary; war fencing: conceived to be applicable on the battlefield – duel fencing (that was less official but still popular in nineteen century France) – and finally, recreational fencing, most often taking the form of a sport.
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series Acta Periodica Duellatorum
spelling doaj-art-9aaa4869779744c193f1fbb0b0c09af42025-08-20T03:57:08ZengBern Open PublishingActa Periodica Duellatorum2064-04042020-10-016210.36950/apd-2018-006Nineteenth Century French Military SabreJulien Garry0University of BourgogneNumerous treaties and methods regarding fencing are known today, either written by experts, veterans of sword-masters, or by the ministry or war and its branches: the schools of Joinville and Saumur. Some are destined to horse riders, others to officers. Each of these methods has its own particularities and, due to the abundance of treaties, discerning the qualities, the flaws, and the overall interest of a specific method can seem complicated. An attempt is made below to answer: why were the methods of French saber in the nineteenth century conceived and Why were they made this way, and what connection do they share with the French military world. These texts are compared and analyzed to uncover their function regarding the Army. From this analysis, three types of fencing will emerge, sometimes opposite, sometimes complementary; war fencing: conceived to be applicable on the battlefield – duel fencing (that was less official but still popular in nineteen century France) – and finally, recreational fencing, most often taking the form of a sport.https://bop.unibe.ch/apd/article/view/7206sabre fencingFrench military fencingnineteenth century
spellingShingle Julien Garry
Nineteenth Century French Military Sabre
Acta Periodica Duellatorum
sabre fencing
French military fencing
nineteenth century
title Nineteenth Century French Military Sabre
title_full Nineteenth Century French Military Sabre
title_fullStr Nineteenth Century French Military Sabre
title_full_unstemmed Nineteenth Century French Military Sabre
title_short Nineteenth Century French Military Sabre
title_sort nineteenth century french military sabre
topic sabre fencing
French military fencing
nineteenth century
url https://bop.unibe.ch/apd/article/view/7206
work_keys_str_mv AT juliengarry nineteenthcenturyfrenchmilitarysabre