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What I am not sure about is the presence of absence of the equivalent of today what we would today consider "weight lifting" by period fighters. The absence of the "year 1400 guide to lifting rocks and logs" does not neccissarily mean it wasn't done. Look at how much is "assumed" by the manual writers in fencing as so basic they don't bother to describe it. Then today we have to cipher out the missing material. That said, it would be far more persuasive if a lifting advocate would show some period evidence for it being used in training

In the sixteenth century, Michel Montaigne, the famous French essayist, described his father as a man of great vigor, “of an upright and well proportioned stature,” who actively pursued fitness and strength through regular training. According to Montaigne, his father trained “with hollow staves. . . filled with lead which he was wont to use and exercise his arms withall, the better to enable himselfe to pitch the barre, to throw the sledge, to cast the pole, and to play at fence.” Montaigne reported that his father also did exercises wearing “shoes with leaden soles,” which he believed helped him leap, vault, and run more effectively.
German educator Joachim Camerarius’ Dialogues des Gymnastica, published in 1544, also contained references to weight training. 11 In the time of the first Queen Elizabeth, John Northbroke wrote a treatise against gambling and dancing that advised young men to “labor with poises of lead or other metal.”


Don't forget that we have an entire article on this subject in the Essays section:
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