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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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out the conquered territories of Asia, also would have spread their formidable<br />

martial culture.<br />

Even more is known about the martial arts of the Roman Empire than<br />

about those of the Greeks. Indeed, it is from Latin that we even have our<br />

term martial arts—from the “arts of Mars,” Roman god of war. From the<br />

disciplined training of the legionnaires to the brutal displays of professional<br />

gladiators, Romans displayed their martial prowess. In addition to adopting<br />

the skills and methods of the Greeks, they developed many of their own.<br />

<strong>The</strong>ir use of logistics and applied engineering resulted in the most formidable<br />

war machine of the ancient world. Romans of all classes were also adept<br />

at knife fighting, both for personal safety and as a badge of honor. Intriguing<br />

hints of gladiator training with blunt or wooden weapons and of their<br />

battles between armed and unarmed opponents as well as the specialty of<br />

combat with animals suggest a complex repertoire of combat techniques.<br />

Speculation exists that some elements of such methods are reflected in the<br />

surviving manuals of medieval Italian Masters of Defence.<br />

<strong>The</strong> decline of Roman civilization in the West and the rise of the feudal<br />

kingdoms of the Middle Ages did not halt the development of martial<br />

arts in Europe. In the period after the fall of the empire, powerful Germanic<br />

and Celtic warrior tribes prospered. <strong>The</strong>se include many notorious for their<br />

martial spirits, such as the Gauls, Vandals, Goths, Picts, Angles, Jutes, Saxons,<br />

Franks, Lombards, Flems, Norse, Danes, Moors, and the Orthodox<br />

Christian warriors of the Byzantine Empire. <strong>The</strong> medieval warrior was a<br />

product of the cultural synthesis between the ordered might of the Roman<br />

war machine and the savage dynamism of Germano-Celtic tribes.<br />

<strong>The</strong> feudal knight of the Middle Ages was to become the very embodiment<br />

of the highest martial skill in Western Europe. Medieval warrior cultures<br />

were highly trained in the use of a vast array of weaponry. <strong>The</strong>y drilled<br />

in and innovated different combinations of arms and armor: assorted shields<br />

and bucklers, short-swords and great-swords, axes, maces, staffs, daggers,<br />

the longbow and crossbow, as well as flails and war-hammers designed to<br />

smash the metal armor of opponents, and an array of deadly bladed pole<br />

weapons that assisted in the downfall of the armored knight.<br />

<strong>The</strong> formidable use of the shield, a highly versatile and effective<br />

weapon in its own right, reached its pinnacle in Western Europe. Shield design<br />

was in constant refinement. A multitude of specialized shield designs,<br />

for use on foot and in mounted combat as well as joust, siege, and single<br />

duel, were developed during the Middle Ages.<br />

During the medieval period, masters-at-arms were known at virtually<br />

every large village and keep, and knights were duty-bound to study arms<br />

for defense of church and realm. In addition, European warriors were in a<br />

constant struggle to improve military technology. Leather armor was re-<br />

Europe 111

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