Modern fencing's origins come from the elegant, and deadly rapier of the
late Italian Renaissance. Several schools of rapier fencing existed,
amongst which one of the strongest and longest lasting was the
Roman-Neapolitan-Sicilian School of swordsmanship (Scuola
Romana-Napoletana-Siciliana). Arising from the early, northern school,
the southern school dates to 17th-Century, in Rome, then spread
throughout the South of Italy and evolved uninterruptedly until the
19th-Century, when it merged with the more modern traditions of fencing.
Historical Fencing Handbook: Rapier-Fencing in the 17th- and
18th-Centuries, is a true, modern fencing manual for training in this
tradition, written by a modern master of the art. The texts of the
17th-and 18th-century masters are broken-down, synthesized and arranged
into a concise, modern pedagogy, opening a gateway to the southern
Italian school for the very first time. Beginning with fundamentals of
stance, footwork, attack and defense, the text also covers complex
provocations, disarms and grapples, and use of the left-hand dagger - a
complete course under one cover!