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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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588 Swordsmanship, Japanese<br />

street situations. Although it can include numerous disarms and grappling<br />

actions, that is not its primary purpose. It is a martial art form intended for<br />

an age when most citizens openly went about armed.<br />

Today’s historical fencers and students of Renaissance swords who are<br />

reconstructing and practicing forms of Western swordsmanship practice and<br />

train as true martial artists in ways far different from those of sport fencers<br />

or theatrical and stage performers. <strong>The</strong>y learn and train through handling<br />

historically accurate replica blades. <strong>The</strong>y practice test-cutting and indulge in<br />

forms of intense free sparring. It may be argued that more has been learned<br />

in the past three decades about the actual functioning of European arms and<br />

armor than has been known for the past two hundred years. <strong>The</strong>re is no<br />

doubt that the skills of Renaissance swordsmanship are slowly becoming<br />

again a legitimate martial art. Today, practitioners of historical Renaissance<br />

swordsmanship, or “the Arte of Defence” as it was known, are reviving and<br />

reconstructing the knowledge and skills of these once sophisticated and<br />

highly effective martial arts. <strong>The</strong>y are not trying to reinvent or merely interpret,<br />

but to replicate and rebuild them. In the process they have succeeded<br />

in creating a new standard for scholarship and study.<br />

John Clements<br />

See also Dueling; Europe; Masters of Defence; Savate<br />

References<br />

Baldick, Robert. 1965. <strong>The</strong> Duel: A History of Dueling. London and New<br />

York: Spring Books.<br />

Brown, Terry. 1997. English <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>. London: Anglo-Saxon Books.<br />

Castle, Egerton. 1969. Schools and Masters of Fence: From the Middle Ages<br />

to the Eighteenth Century. 1885. Reprint, London: Arms and Armour<br />

Press.<br />

Clements, John. 1998. Medieval Swordsmanship: Illustrated Techniques and<br />

Methods. Boulder, CO: Paladin Press.<br />

———. 1997. Renaissance Swordsmanship: <strong>The</strong> Illustrated Use of Rapiers<br />

and Cut and Thrust Swords. Boulder, CO: Paladin Press.<br />

Hutton, Alfred. 1892. Old Swordplay: <strong>The</strong> System of Fence in Vogue during<br />

the XVIth, XVIIth, and XVIIIth Centuries, with Lessons Arranged from<br />

the Works of Various Ancient Masters. London:<br />

H. Grevel and Co.<br />

———. 1980. <strong>The</strong> Sword and the Centuries: or, Old Sword Days and Old<br />

Sword Ways. 1901. Reprint, Rutland, VT: Charles E. Tuttle.<br />

Turner, Craig, and Tony Soper. 1990. Methods and Practice of Elizabethan<br />

Swordplay. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.<br />

Wise, Arthur. 1971. <strong>The</strong> Art and History of Personal Combat. London:<br />

Hugh Evelyn.<br />

Swordsmanship, Japanese<br />

Japanese swordsmanship since ancient times has been a unique martial discipline<br />

of wielding a straight or curved sword using one or two hands. It

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