Meyer Longsword Guards/Stances
Meyer's 1570 text provides a description of the many guard positions in his system, which seems overly complicated, however it's important to remember two things: 1) All positions are just variations on the 4 fundamental/principal guards - Tag, Alber, Ochs, and Pflug. 2) The positions are transitional points as you move through cuts and parries, so occur organially during your fencing motions - they're generally not intended to be positions to wait in at length for your opponent's attack.,

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: Attacking the Openings - the Meyer Square

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: The Circle (Zirckel)

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: Shooting Through

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Master Strikes: Krumphau

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: Schlussel (The Key)

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My Golden Retriever Heals a Terrified Rescue Kitten in Just 3 Meetings!

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: Exploring Absetzen

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Learn the Art of Combat: Longsword Guards - Beginners Guide

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Revenge of the Sith But the Jedi Are Smart

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How Historical Swordfight Really Looked Like

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Joachim Meyer Guards and Stances - German Longsword

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: First Play from the High Guard (Tag)

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Sword drill: Advanced technical exercises

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: The Windthauw

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Joachim Meyer's Longsword: Winding, Duplieren, Blendthauw

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Facing Skilled VS Unskilled Opponents

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Sword drill: Intermediate technical exercises

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Defense Against the Zwerch Copter

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The Chakram and its Forgotten Technique

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