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Notes
[edit]Prise de Fer (“Taking the Blade”)
[edit]“A prise de fer is a movement that takes an opponent’s blade into any one line and holds it there as a preparation to an attack” (3, 60) There are 4 prise de fer actions:
- Opposition (a.k.a. Glide)
- Can be executed in all lines. Fencer controls opponent’s blade in one line and does not release until action is complete (5, 129)
- The glide is “in reality a feint of direct thrust. Glide along your adversary’s blade slyly and without giving alarm” (4, 43)
- Bind (a.k.a Transfer)
- “With the blades engaged, the action of carrying the opponent’s blade diagonally across from high to a low line, or vice versa” (1, 180)
- Croisé (a.k.a. Cross)
- “A semibind executed by taking the opponent’s blade vertically from the high line to the low line” (5, 51)
- Is not executed from low to high (1, 183)
- Also called a “liement” where “the blade is taken from high to low line or vice versa” (3, 60)
- Envelopment (a.k.a. Circular Transfer)
- Takes the blade in one line and controls it while in that line and completing a circular motion. Contact remains throughout (5, 50)
References
[edit]- Crosnier, Roger. Fencing with the Foil, New York: A. S. Barnes and Company, 1948.
- Barbasetti, Luigi. The Art of the Foil, New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, 1932.
- Hett, G. V. Fencing, New York: Pitman Publishing Corporation, 1939.
- Rondelle, Louis. Foil and Sabre, Boston: Dana Estes and Company, 1892.
- Garret, Maxwell R., Emmanuil G. Kaidanov, and Gil A. Pezza. Foil, Saber, and Épeé Fencing, University Park: Pennsylvania Stat University Press, 1994.