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.

320 Masters of Defence<br />

“Masters of fencing” are mentioned in Italy in the 1300s as offering<br />

advice and exercises for fighting. In the 1400s, there were well-established<br />

fencing academies in Milan, Venice, and Verona, and later Bologna; even<br />

earlier, a master swordsman by the name of Goffredo taught the youth of<br />

Civildale in 1259. <strong>The</strong>re are also references in Italy during the 1400s to the<br />

“trial for status” of a master of Ars Palistrinae (<strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>). <strong>The</strong> Bolognese<br />

school in Italy existed since the early 1200s under instructors in the<br />

1300s such as Master Rosolino, Master Francesco, and Master Nerio. In<br />

the 1400s, Master Filippo di Bartolomeo Dardi, an astrologer, mathematician,<br />

and professor at Bologna University, also kept a school there. An Italian<br />

fencing master from the late 1600s also stated that a “Corporation of<br />

Fencing Masters,” headquartered in Madrid, existed in Spain from the<br />

Middle Ages. <strong>The</strong>re are numerous references to Esgrimidors (fencing masters)<br />

in Portuguese civil documents from the late 1400s.<br />

<strong>The</strong> people of the Germanic states were the most prolific writers among<br />

the European martial artists. German sword masters are first mentioned as<br />

early as 1259; Hans Liechtenauer (or Johannes Lichtenawer) is considered<br />

the grand Fechtmeister (fighting master) of the German schools of fighting<br />

and swordplay. A whole series of fencing manuals, or Fechterbuecher (fight<br />

books), are based on his work. One of the earliest was compiled in 1389 by<br />

Hanko Doebringer, a priest who at one time appears to have studied fighting<br />

under Liechtenauer. As was common practice at the time, it is written in<br />

rhymed verse. In order to conceal his teachings, he also utilized highly cryptic<br />

phrasing. Liechtenauer himself appears to have studied under several earlier<br />

unknown masters such as Lamprecht from Bohemia, Virgily from<br />

Krakow, and Liegnitzer in Silesia. His influential teachings, reflecting fighting<br />

methods developed over a century earlier, cover a variety of weapons<br />

from sword and shield to staff, plus a range of unarmed fighting techniques.<br />

Other major German masters include Joerg Wilhalm, whose text of<br />

1523 survives, as well as Hans Lebkommer, who in 1530 put his methods<br />

on paper in Der Alten Fechter an fengliche Kunst (<strong>The</strong> Original Art of the<br />

Ancient Fencers) and Fechtmeister Kal (Fight Master). Lebkommer’s fechtbuch<br />

is actually the compilation of Christian Egenolph, and as with many<br />

of the others, it includes materials from earlier works such as those by Andre<br />

Pauerfeindts of 1516, and the student of Liechtenauer, Fechtmeister<br />

Sigmund Ringeck, of ca. 1440. Ringeck’s material includes the use of the<br />

sword, the scimitar-like falchion, and other weapons. As with many later<br />

German masters, Ringeck interpreted Hans Liechtenauer’s earlier verses<br />

and added them to his own method.<br />

Hans Talhoffer is a more widely known major Master of Defence from<br />

the Middle Ages. His fechtbuch from 1443 was reprinted many times during<br />

the 1400s but now only exists in various editions from the sixteenth and

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!