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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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the time, also taught wrestling, grappling, disarms, dagger fighting, and the<br />

use of two-handed swords, staffs, and pole-arms. Silver taught four “governors,”<br />

or key principles: judgment, distance, time, and place. He argued that<br />

the new methods of defense were inferior to the existing English art.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Renaissance masters systematized the study of fighting skills, particularly<br />

swordsmanship, into sophisticated, versatile, and highly effective<br />

martial arts, which culminated in the development of the ultimate streetfighting<br />

and dueling weapon, the quick and deadly thrusting rapier. <strong>The</strong><br />

innovations in Renaissance fighting methods did not happen in a vacuum;<br />

they resulted from the needs of urban encounters and private quarrels as<br />

opposed to strict battlefield conditions.<br />

Moreover, links between the brutal, practical fighting methods of the<br />

Middle Ages and the more sophisticated, elegant Renaissance fencing systems<br />

are evident. <strong>The</strong> English, for example, followed some of their old<br />

fighting traditions well into the 1800s, as did the Germans and Spanish.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y did not discard or ignore, but rather used, adapted, and, in some<br />

cases, refined methods that had persisted for centuries. Differences in the<br />

two periods lie in the overall attitude toward the study of the craft and the<br />

specific techniques developed (e.g., civilian dueling and self-defense as opposed<br />

to war, tournament, and trial by combat). Although there was considerable<br />

innovation in the European martial arts of the Renaissance, there<br />

should be no doubt that such innovations were built upon the legacy of the<br />

medieval arts.<br />

<strong>The</strong> various Masters of Defence were not always clear or complete in<br />

their ideas. Moreover, masters sometimes contradict one another. Overall,<br />

however, their works describe well-reasoned, effective fighting arts built<br />

upon the legacy of arms and armor and skills of their ancestors.<br />

European warrior skills were for the most part the indigenous fighting<br />

arts of a wide range of heterogeneous peoples and not specifically limited to<br />

a warrior class. <strong>The</strong> familiar principles of timing, distance, technique, and<br />

perception, defined in various ways, have been identified and stressed by experts<br />

in countless martial arts and were clearly recognized by Western Masters<br />

of Defence. Yet there is more to the European martial arts than sheer<br />

technique. Although there is an unmistakable pragmatism concerned with<br />

sheer effectiveness, this is always balanced by a strong and clear humanistic<br />

philosophy and respect for law and one’s fellow man—the very qualities so<br />

often associated with the modern idealized practice of Asian martial arts.<br />

While it is easy today to find hundreds of books on the techniques of<br />

Asian fighting arts, it remains far more difficult to obtain similar information<br />

regarding the European traditions. Even though practitioners of historical<br />

Western arts cannot rely on traditional oral transmission from one<br />

practitioner to another, detailed technical manuals have been preserved. In<br />

Masters of Defence 325

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