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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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A knife would be pressed into each of their hands. A signal would be<br />

given—at which point they would stab each other like wild beasts. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

would flail away until one of them either succumbed or begged for quarter”<br />

(1994, 13).<br />

<strong>The</strong>se “duels” are perhaps the origin of trial by combat or the judicial<br />

combat. <strong>The</strong> belief was that God would favor the just combatant and ensure<br />

his victory. Authorities would punish the loser, often hanging him. Judicial<br />

combats may have occurred as early as A.D. 500. Popes sanctioned<br />

them. Such trials largely disappeared by 1500. During the interval, the<br />

practice was “increasingly a prerogative of the upper classes, accustomed<br />

to the use of their weapons” (Kiernan 1988, 34).<br />

Another possible source for the duel was the medieval tournament,<br />

which seems to have had its origin in small-scale battles between groups of<br />

rival knights. By the fourteenth century, the joust, or single combat, took<br />

the place of the melee, as the small-scale battle was called. Sometimes<br />

blunted weapons were used and sometimes they were not. Kiernan asserts<br />

that “all the diverse forms of single combat contributed to the ‘duel of honour’<br />

that was coming to the front in the later Middle Ages, and was the direct<br />

ancestor of the modern duel. Like trial by combat or the joust, it required<br />

official sanction, and took place under regulation” (1988, 40).<br />

Chivalry developed, and by the 1500s treatises on dueling were published.<br />

<strong>The</strong> duel in modern form became a privilege of the noble class. Stage<br />

Four was finally reached. For an individual, the ability to give and accept<br />

challenges defined him as not only a person of honor, but as a member of<br />

the aristocracy. As Europe became modern, the duel did not decline as<br />

might be expected, for the duel became attractive to members of the middle<br />

class who aspired to become members of the gentry. Outlawing of the<br />

duel by monarchs and governments did not prevent the duel’s spread. <strong>The</strong><br />

duel even spread to the lower classes, whose duels Pieter Spierenburg<br />

(1998) has referred to as “popular duels” in contrast to “elite duels.” <strong>The</strong><br />

practice even persisted into the twentieth century.<br />

Perhaps because the duel persisted in Germany until <strong>World</strong> War II,<br />

creating a plethora of information, recent scholarly attention has focused<br />

on the German duel in the late nineteenth century. Three theories for its<br />

persistence have been offered: (1) Kiernan sees the duel, including the German<br />

duel, as a survival from a bygone era that was used by the aristocracy<br />

as a means of preserving their privileged position; (2) Ute Frevert argues<br />

that the German bourgeois adopted dueling as a means by which men<br />

could achieve and maintain honor by demonstrating personal bravery; (3)<br />

McAleer views the German duel as an attempt at recovery of an illusory<br />

past, a practice through which men of honor, by demonstrating courage,<br />

could link themselves to the ruling warrior class of the Middle Ages. <strong>The</strong><br />

Dueling 105

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