Legal target areas
Legal target areas are where you are allowed to strike your opponent. These differ as to what style of combat you are currently engaged in.
Heavy combat target areas:
- The torso - considered to be anwhere above the points of the hip, including the groin, shoulder blades, and the areas between the neck and shoulders are considered to be the torso.
- The face - between the chin and middle of the forehead, and the area between the ears.
- The head - the whole neck and head, excluding the face as outlined above.
- The thigh - One inch above the knee, to the bottom of the hip socket.
- Hips - area between the bottom of the hip socket, and below the point of the hips.
- Shoulders - The point of the shoulder down to a line even with the top of the underarm.
- Arms - shoulder to one inch above the wrist.
Blows that land outside these areas shall not be counted. These target areas are derived from Lochac's combat handbook.
Archery
Due to the nature of light-fighting, it is quite difficult to control where the arrow will land (especially with less-experienced fighters). To this end there are no illegal target areas in archery.
Dangerous situations are avoided (instead) by a legal range in which archers are allowed to fire. If a target is within 5 yards/metres, it is illegal to fire upon them.
Rapier combat
Rapier combat is considerably different to heavy combat. There are no illegal target areas in rapier. Even the hand and foot are legal target areas - if you cannot move it out of the way quick enough then you'd better practise harder.
This viewpoint is mirrored in the authorisation process for rapier - in which a prospective rapier fighter must prove that they are proficient enough to know how to perform the basic offensive and defensive moves. This is as opposed to archery - wherin the fighter merely has to understand basic safety on the field.