The Academy of the Sword
The most detailed and comprehensive treatise on swordsmanship ever written.

Gerard Thibault’s Academy of the Sword offers an extraordinary glimpse into a forgotten landscape of ideas, in which Pythagorean sacred geometry illuminated the lethal realities of rapier combat to create one of the Western world’s only thoroughly documented esoteric martial arts. Translated by the widely respected occultist and scholar John Michael Greer, this stunningly illustrated and precisely detailed manual of Renaissance swordsmanship is a triumphant document of Renaissance culture—as well as a practical manual of a martial art that can still be studied and practiced today.

1124143717
The Academy of the Sword
The most detailed and comprehensive treatise on swordsmanship ever written.

Gerard Thibault’s Academy of the Sword offers an extraordinary glimpse into a forgotten landscape of ideas, in which Pythagorean sacred geometry illuminated the lethal realities of rapier combat to create one of the Western world’s only thoroughly documented esoteric martial arts. Translated by the widely respected occultist and scholar John Michael Greer, this stunningly illustrated and precisely detailed manual of Renaissance swordsmanship is a triumphant document of Renaissance culture—as well as a practical manual of a martial art that can still be studied and practiced today.

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The Academy of the Sword

The Academy of the Sword

The Academy of the Sword

The Academy of the Sword

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Overview

The most detailed and comprehensive treatise on swordsmanship ever written.

Gerard Thibault’s Academy of the Sword offers an extraordinary glimpse into a forgotten landscape of ideas, in which Pythagorean sacred geometry illuminated the lethal realities of rapier combat to create one of the Western world’s only thoroughly documented esoteric martial arts. Translated by the widely respected occultist and scholar John Michael Greer, this stunningly illustrated and precisely detailed manual of Renaissance swordsmanship is a triumphant document of Renaissance culture—as well as a practical manual of a martial art that can still be studied and practiced today.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781904658849
Publisher: AEON BOOKS LTD
Publication date: 02/20/2017
Pages: 512
Product dimensions: 7.70(w) x 9.80(h) x 1.40(d)

About the Author

Gérard Thibault d'Anvers (ca. 1574–1627) was a Dutch fencing master and author of the 1628 rapier manual Academie de l'Espée ('The Academy of the Sword'). His manual is one of the most detailed and elaborate extant sources on rapier combat, painstakingly utilizing geometry and logic to defend his unorthodox style of swordsmanship.

John Michael Greer is the award-winning author of more than fifty books, including The New Encyclopedia of the OccultThe Druidry HandbookThe Celtic Golden Dawn, and Circles of Power: An Introduction to Hermetic Magic. An initiate in Freemasonry, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, and the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids, Greer served as the Grand Archdruid of the Ancient Order of Druids in America (AODA) for twelve years. He lives in Rhode Island with his wife Sara. Greer is also the author of eleven fantasy and science fiction novels and ten nonfiction books on peak oil and the future of industrial society, and also blogs weekly on politics, magic, and the future at www.ecosophia.net.

Read an Excerpt

The Academy of the Sword


By Gerard Thibault d'Anvers, JOHN MICHAEL GREER

Aeon Books Ltd

Copyright © 2017 John Michael Greer
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-904658-84-9



CHAPTER 1

On the Proportions of the Human Body, Related to the Figure of our Circle and to the Proper Length of the Sword

* * *

A discourse on the excellence and perfection of Man, declaring that his body is exactly compassed by Number, Weight and Measure, having movements that relate to the circle

Man is the most perfect and excellent of all the creatures of the world. In him is found, among other marks of divine wisdom, so exquisite a representation of the whole universe, in its entirety and in its principal parts, that he has been rightly called by the ancient philosophers "Microcosm", which is to say the Little World.

For even aside from the dignity of the soul, which has such great advantages over all that is perishable, his body contains an abridgement, not only of all that is here below on earth, but also of that which is in heaven itself. It represents the whole with a harmony so sweet, beautiful and complete, and with so exact a concordance of number, measure and weight, related so marvelously to the virtues of the four elements and to the influence of the seven planets, that nothing else can be found like it.

The most perfect number, Ten, is continually shown before his eyes, in its entirety by his own fingers, and again divided into two equal halves on his two hands, with Five fingers on each; which is again divided unequally into One and Four by the thumb and the rest of the fingers, of which the One is made up of Two joints, and the Four of Three. In such a way, this structure places always in his view the first and most excellent numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 10.

Such illustrious philosophers as Pythagoras, Plato, and all those of their schools have held these numbers in such great esteem that they chose to conceal in them, and deduce from them, the greatest mysteries of their doctrine. Furthermore, in the length, breadth and thickness of this same body, measure is seen to be so precisely observed that the greatest ancient and modern architects have not found anything else in the world more appropriate to serve them as a rule, according to which they order their works, than this sole pattern of man. In this pattern they saw a perpetual proportion observed by God Himself in the making of the body, which they took as an example in order to fashion from the beginnings the architecture of temples, theaters, amphitheaters, palaces, towers, ships, and other instruments both of peace and of war, not only in their entirety, but also in each of their principal parts: columns, posts, capitals, pedestals, and other similar members.

So we read that the Temple of Solomon, that grand ornament and miracle of the flourishing republic of the Jews, was built according to this same proportion; and what is more, that God Himself commanded the patriarch Noah, in building the Ark, to follow the same rule. For just as the body of man measures 300 minutes in length, 50 in breadth, and 30 in thickness through the middle of the breast, so similarly the Ark was made 300 cubits in length, 50 in breadth and 30 in height. In both of these the length is six times the breadth, and ten times the depth.

This is a proportion of which we have the numbers always before our eyes, and which we are able to demonstrate clearly on our fingers, where we are accustomed to apprehend the first lessons of natural arithmetic. For the whole sum of the fingers, which is 10, being multiplied by 3, makes 30 for the thickness, and multiplied by 5 makes 50 for the breadth; and multiplied by 10, and then again by 3, makes 300 for the length.

These measures also agree with what several grave authors have written on the same subject. Among others, Vitruvius reports that the stature of man is six geometric feet in length; the foot contains ten degrees, and each degree five minutes; which makes 60 degrees or 300 minutes, corresponding exactly to the 300 cubits of the Ark. Although I would rather not rely so precisely on Vitruvius as to give a man a length of six geometrical feet, it is enough for me that his height may be divided into six equal measures. Pliny remarks also in Book Seven, Chapter Seventeen, that the natural stature of a well-proportioned man accords exactly with the measure of his own arms from the fingertips of one hand to those of the other. In sum, all philosophers have made so great an estimation of this measure, and of the proportion of the human body, and have studied it so much in one way or another, that Pythagoras went so far as to name man "the measure of all things".

As for the proportion of man's weight, it cannot be doubted that this may also be observed with as much art as number or measure. This is easy to recognize, because it is man alone of all the animals who walks upright, in such a way that he always holds himself in counterpoise and balance in all his actions. Otherwise, he would be made awkward by them at every moment. For his structure is such that all his members (the arms excepted) become progressively heavier as they are raised up above the ground, so that lighter and weaker parts hold up others, which are heavier and more robust. This would be a thing against Nature, and indeed insupportable over any period of time, with so many and diverse sorts of movements as one sees the human body make, if that body did not regulate its weight from the top of the head to the soles of the feet with a singular and perfect art.

A more complete discussion of this matter belongs to the anatomists, whose business it is to declare the particulars of this noble structure. We do not claim to expound any of this subject except that which touches on the exercise of arms. We are content to declare several things in general concerning it, notably touching its exterior proportions, to the end that once this is done it may be all the more easy to judge the nature and scope of each of the movements that proceed from it. Since these movements are sometimes made with the whole body, sometimes and more often with the arms and hands, and at other times with the legs and feet, we will demonstrate presently that men are able to make use of their necessary and useful movements in more ways, more easily, and more promptly than the other animals can.

Concerning this it is necessary to recognize that it is ordinarily and properly the office of the arms and hands to execute the commands of the will, in doing the actions which utility or necessity demand; and that the legs and feet do not commonly serve any purpose but that of carrying and turning the body, and of putting the arms and hands in places where the will intends their work to be done. Further, there is this difference, that the arms and legs are specially fitted to make large movements, as the hands and feet to make smaller ones, and that the arms are particularly capable of executing what is needed with force, just as the hands are able for their part to work with dexterity.

The feet, as pillars which hold up the body, are nearly immobile toward the heels, but toward the toes they move quite readily, so that by the inequality of this structure the body is as able to strengthen itself above, by means of the one, as it is, on the other hand, to move and turn itself quickly and easily to every side, by means of the other. From both of these, again, the body receives great assistance by the proper length that they furnish to it as a stable and solid foundation when the body stands still, and when the body walks, they help to push it and give it its course.

The hands move with great agility in all their parts, and at their greatest width measure half the width of the face, or one-quarter that of the breast. When the hand is closed, the circumference of the fist will be a third of the circumference of the breast, so that it naturally is able to serve it as a shield for defense held out in front, either open and extended or well closed.

This is why the Jewish author Philo has occasion to say that in place of all the ornaments and natural defenses of the other animals, man has been given reason as a guide, and hands as instruments to execute that which reason wills. He says also that reason is the hand of the understanding, the hand of reason is speech, and the bodily hands are those which carry out what speech commands. These instruments, which contain in themselves all the sufficiency of those of other creatures, are in consequence equal to them in dignity, and indeed surpass them.

For this reason, man comes into the world without any weapons at all, either offensive or defensive, and has nothing but the sole instrument of the hand, by means of which he is able to prevail over all. The other animals defend themselves and attack their opponents, some with teeth, others with claws, hooves or horns, as can be seen in elephants, lions, bears, horses, bulls, tigers and other beasts. To these Nature has handed out in a rather stingy fashion one sole kind of weapons to each, for the needs of its defense. To man, however, who seems to be deprived of all these, she has given in recompense the understanding to recognize them, the mind to make them, and the hands to help himself by means of any and all of them.

Again, so that he may be able to help himself with greater advantage, Nature has given him by a special privilege the power to strike to the rear with his arms and to the front with his feet at the same instant, a thing impossible to other creatures. Also, for the same or similar reasons, the natural position of the arms is in such a place that the operations of the hands fall always under the government of the eyes, for the purpose of securing and assisting that much more easily the rest of the members in their necessities.

In the same way, therefore, all the artists, architects, perspectivists, and others mentioned earlier have tried to prove the foundations of their rules by the proportions of the body of man. We have similarly held to the same course, but with better success, and have found with the help of this same pattern the true and proportional measure of all the movements, times, and distances which must be observed in our practice. This will be demonstrated to you all at once in the explanation of our circle, where the measures and proportions of man are applied to man himself, and to the movements which he makes with his own limbs, where the aforesaid proportions are found, and without which it is impossible for him to perform the least action in the world.

In practicing this exercise, as I have done for some years in many countries, and with great practitioners of the art — of whom some tend toward the French style, others to the Italian, and all in all, each one does in his own manner — I have seen that people are accustomed by all of these styles to strange postures: the body bent in several angles with feet and legs put out of their natural proportion, and in positions wholly repugnant to the ordinary way one walks or stands. Instead of showing any great courage by these postures, in fact, those who use them inconvenience themselves and lessen their own force, rather than obtaining through them the effect which these inventions claim.

Considering this closely, and knowing on the other hand that all the arts follow Nature, without ever contravening her, I have decided to conduct our exercise also in the same school of this sovereign mistress of good inventions. In this, I have remarked, first of all, that all the measures and stances to be observed in this practice (which are the first foundations, and the basis for all the following parts) proceed from the proportions of the human body. Without recognizing this, it is impossible to learn to properly take up these measures and stances, or to practice them with assurance. It is the same with the pace and steps, ordinary and extraordinary, which the usage of the exercise and the variety of occasions may require. It is apparent, therefore, that it is necessary first to recognize the proportion of the members and parts of the human body, so that one may at the very least make some reasonable judgement of the scope of each movement in proportion to the member or members on which it depends, and from which it may be continued, ended, turned, returned, released, bent, or changed in any of thousands of other ways.

It is, therefore, necessary to learn first of all that the philosophers attribute to this Microcosm, the human body, diverse figures, of which the triangle, square and pentagon will be discussed elsewhere. For now, we say that the body is also round or circular in the figure of its movements.

To this accords the saying of Hippocrates, prince of physicians, that the body is a circle. This may be understood in regard to the natural actions and operations of its inner parts, and of their subordinate changes, reciprocal and succeeding one another in such a way that one can no longer find a beginning or an end, as in the circumference of a circle. It can also be related to the figure in all its movements in space, each of which takes place in a circle, extending from the center of its strength out to the extreme circumference of its weakness.

Now, since it will presently be asked what gives you the measure that is convenient and proportional to the stature, situations, steps, and generally all the outward movements of the same body, here is the figure of our circle, which we say contains all the qualities just mentioned, and is drawn from the proper measure and proportion of the human body.

All mathematicians know that the circle is the simplest, first, and indeed the most perfect, most excellent and most useful of all figures for defense, since it only allows itself to touch a surface at one point at a time. A figure so accomplished ought not to be lacking in a body so noble, and indeed a circle can be demonstrated in the human body in diverse manners. Principally, this can be done from the length of the body at full extension, that is, when it stands upright on its legs, feet together, and arms extended straight up so that the elbows are level with the top of the head. When it stands in this way, either upright against a wall or extended in the same way on the ground, and one end of a large compass is placed at the navel and the other at the toes or against the soles of the feet, and the circumference is then drawn all around, it forms a circle, the center of which will be at the person's navel, the diameter equal to the height at full extension, and the circumference touching the soles of the feet on one side and the tips of the fingers on the other. If this turns out not to be the case, the body is not properly proportioned according to the rules of composition.

That is the circle that we propose to use all through this book for skill in our exercise. Seeing that it is proportioned to the extended length of a man, we say also that it is proportioned to all the movements, which he would know how to make, with arms and legs and with the entire body, or with any one of its parts.

It would be possible to draw many other circles from the proportions of man in diverse manners (such as by placing the center on the genitals, and the circumference at the top of the head and the soles of the feet). These cannot have the same sufficiency, nor the convenience of measures, as that which we have given here, because they do not have the proportion with the arms extended, which is obviously needed to execute the greater part of this exercise. For this reason, together with several other considerations, if it is a question of making use of this circle, it is necessary not to take up any other diameter than that which accords exactly with the body's length at full extension.


* * *

The manner of laying out the circle on the ground, with all its appurtenances

Having shown the dimension of the diameter, the center, and the circumference, it now follows that we should declare all the rest, in order to find the proportions that depend on them. To this end, it is necessary to describe the completed circle on level ground in its correct and convenient size, taking the measure of its diameter from the extended length of the person whose body we wish to take for an example. Here is how you should proceed:

Choose an appropriate place, where there is a level floor. First, mark the center point on this with chalk, putting it wherever seems most convenient to you.

When this is done, take a sword as long as the circle's half-diameter, so that when the point is set on the ground between the two feet of the person being measured, the quillons come just to the height of the navel. Put one of the quillons on the center point, and taking the sword's point as a guide, with a piece of chalk between the fingers, swing the point around in a circle, thus describing the circumference.

This having been traced, take a string of the kind that carpenters use, which you rub with chalk, and lay out the diameter according to the convenience of the place. Extend it on both ends for two feet beyond the circumference. Mark the two points where it intersects the circumference: the one closer to you with a C; the other, opposite it, with an X.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Academy of the Sword by Gerard Thibault d'Anvers, JOHN MICHAEL GREER. Copyright © 2017 John Michael Greer. Excerpted by permission of Aeon Books Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Translator’s Introduction

Author’s notice: On The Consideration of the Figures in this Book

Chapter One: On the Proportions of the Human Body, Related to the Figure of our Circle and to the Proper Length of the Sword

Chapter Two: On the Proportions of the Body

Chapter Three: On the Correct Way of Drawing the Sword and Entering into Measure

Chapter Four: On the Posture of the Straight Line

Chapter Five: On Attacks at the First Instance, and
Feints

Chapter Six: On Attacks and Counters on the Straight Line

Chapter Seven: On the Timing of Attacks and Counters

Chapter Eight: On Imbrocades

Chapter Nine: On Sentiment

Chapter Ten: On Sentiment, Continued

Chapter Eleven: On Entering Within the Angles

Chapter Twelve: On Entering Within the Angles, Continued

Chapter Thirteen: On An Alternate Guard

Chapter Fourteen: On Cuts

Chapter Fifteen: On Techniques Outside the Arm

Chapter Sixteen: On Pauses

Chapter Seventeen: On Cuts, Continued

Chapter Eighteen: On Cuts To The Right Arm

Chapter Nineteen: On Obliging the Blade

Chapter Twenty: The academy of The sword

Chapter Twenty-one: On Attacks of First Intention

Chapter Twenty-two: On Diverse Counters

Chapter Twenty-three: On Another Alternate Guard

Chapter Twenty-four: On Different Postures

Chapter Twenty-five: On Subtle Variations

Chapter Twenty-six: On Subjecting to the Inside

Chapter Twenty-seven: On Parrying

Chapter Twenty-eight: On Unnatural Postures

Chapter Twenty-nine: On Unnatural Postures, Continued

Chapter Thirty: On Maintaining the Advantage

Chapter Thirty-one: On Obliging the Blade, Revisited

Chapter Thirty-two: On Attacks of First Intention, Revisited

Chapter Thirty-three: On the Postures of Salvatore Fabris

Introduction To Book Two

Chapter Thirty-four: On Facing the Sword and Dagger

Chapter Thirty-five: On Facing the Sword and Dagger, Continued

Chapter Thirty-six: On Facing the Sword and Dagger, Further Continued

Chapter Thirty-seven: On Facing the Sword and Dagger, Concluded

Chapter Thirty-eight: On Facing the Sword and Shield

Chapter Thirty-nine: On Facing the Sword and Shield, Continued

Chapter Forty: On Facing the Two-Handed Sword

Chapter Forty-one: On Facing the Two-Handed Sword, Continued

Chapter Forty-two: On Facing the Two-Handed Sword, Concluded

Chapter Forty-three: On Facing the Left-Handed Swordsman

Chapter Forty-four: On Facing the Musketeer

Note to the Reader

Glossary of Terms

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