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Armenian Youth Fencing Championship Launched In Byureghavan

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  • Armenian Youth Fencing Championship Launched In Byureghavan

    ARMENIAN YOUTH FENCING CHAMPIONSHIP LAUNCHED IN BYUREGHAVAN

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    04.02.2010 15:25 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Youth Fencing Championship launched on
    February 4 in Byureghavan will continue until February 6. As Artashes
    Madoyan, general secretary of Armenian Fencing Federation told a
    PanARMENIAN.Net reporter, 51 athletes fight for the Armenian rapier
    champion title on the first day of the tournament. Athletes represent
    'Yerevan, Gyumri, Vanadzor and Byuregavan. The winners will be known
    today," Madoyan said.

    Rapier (Fencing) sports Fencing is a family of sports and activities
    that feature armed combat involving cutting, stabbing, or bludgeoning
    weapons that are directly manipulated by hand, rather than shot,
    thrown or positioned. Examples include swords, knives, pikes,
    bayonets, batons, clubs, and similar weapons. In contemporary common
    usage, fencing tends to refer specifically to European schools of
    swordsmanship and to the modern Olympic sport that has evolved out
    of them.

    Fencing is one of the four sports which has been featured at every
    modern Olympic Games. Currently, three types of weapon are used in
    Olympic fencing:

    * Foil - a light thrusting weapon; the valid target is restricted
    to the torso, the chest, shoulders, and back; double touches are not
    allowed (see priority rules below). This weapon follows the rule of
    "right of way" * E'pe'e - a heavy thrusting weapon; the valid target
    area covers the entire body; double touches are allowed. There is no
    "right of way" * Sabre - a light cutting and thrusting weapon; the
    valid target area is the saddle line, which is from one side of your
    hip to the other and up, this also includes the head. The target area
    does not include the hands. This weapon follows "right of way"

    The word fence was originally a shortening of the Middle English
    defens, which came from an Italian word, defensio, in origin a
    Latin word. The first known use of defens in reference to English
    swordsmanship is in William Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor:
    "Alas sir, I cannot fence."
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