24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

An old German woodcut illustrating various methods of the “art of fighting,” Kunst des Fechtens, which included an<br />

array of bladed and staff weaponry along with unarmed skills. (Courtesy of John Clements)<br />

114 Europe<br />

and indeed, was one of the first truly civilian weapons developed in any society.<br />

It rose from a practical street-fighting tool to the instrument of a<br />

“gentleman’s” martial art in Western and Central Europe from roughly<br />

1500 to 1700. No equivalent to this unique weapon form and its sophisticated<br />

manner of use is found in Asian societies, and no better example of<br />

a distinctly Western martial art can be seen. <strong>The</strong> rapier is a thrusting<br />

weapon with considerable range and a linear style well suited to exceedingly<br />

quick and penetrating attacks from difficult angles. Dueling and urban<br />

violence spurred the development of numerous fencing schools and<br />

rapier fighting styles. <strong>The</strong> practitioners of rapier fencing were innovative<br />

martialists at a time when European society was experiencing radical transformations.<br />

By the late 1600s, this environment led to the creation of the<br />

fencing salons and salles (“halls”) of the upper classes for instruction in dueling<br />

with the small-sword. <strong>The</strong> small-sword was an elegant tool for defending<br />

gentlemanly honor and reputation with deadly precision. An extremely<br />

fast and deceptive thrusting tool, it has distant sporting<br />

descendants in the modern Olympic foil and épée. Both rapier and smallsword<br />

fencing incorporated the use of the dagger and an array of unarmed<br />

fighting techniques. Each was far more martial than the sporting versions<br />

of today and far more precise than the amusing swashbuckling nonsense of<br />

contemporary films.<br />

Russia was also a land where martial arts were in constant development.<br />

During the eleventh and twelfth centuries, before the Mongol invasions,<br />

Russian warriors wore armor of high quality and wielded shields and<br />

long-swords in deadly combination. A Russian proverb confidently stated<br />

that a two-bladed sword from the Rodina (motherland) was more than a<br />

match for any one-bladed scimitar from the “pagans” (Muslims and Tartars).<br />

When Peter the Great assumed power in 1682, Russian peasants were<br />

so proficient at stickfighting that one of his first official acts was to put a<br />

stop to it. Peter was going to war against the Ottoman and Swedish empires,<br />

and he was going to need healthy troops for the army. In the stick-

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!