Postby Benjamin Smith » Mon Feb 23, 2009 8:05 pm
To answer the question that may be behind your question I'll tell you what we know.
We know that there were substantial warrior traditions in Europe going back thousands of years. The Romans fought people all over Europe at the time of Christ, and they didn't always win. The societies they fought universally had warrior aristocracy, often equipped with sophisticated and sometimes expensive equipment. You need martial arts developed to a fairly high degree to make use of the weaponry that has survived. The arts of these peoples may not have been written down, but they almost certainly had sophisticated and effective techniques that they could use to employ their sophisticated weaponry and armor. The Celts, Scandinavians, Romans, Britons, Goths, Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Britons, Scots, Picts, Irish, Vandals, Magyars, Boyars, Welsh, Norse, and all the other peoples in Europe had warrior cultures, many of them hundreds if not thousands of years old.
Simply put when your people go to war consistently over the years, you develop arts to win them with. Among these are personal combat arts that modern people call "martial arts." They probably originated a long, long, long time ago, all over Europe. Some of them, or parts of them, may have been imported by migrating peoples, but there is no reason to think that they are not, for all intents and purposes, indigenous to Europe.
As Ewart Oakeshott once said describing archaeolgical finds: when we have a find with a confirmed date we can be almost completely certain that objects of its kind were in use some time before the particular item we have. The same would certainly be true of martial arts. We find direct literary evidence from 1295, and from the ancient Roman Republic. We find indirect historical, cultural, anthropological, ethnographic, archaeological, and artistic evidence much earlier than the direct literary evidence. Therefore, they must have existed even before those times.
Did they change over that time? Certainly. Different weapons, armors, cultures, expectations, and economies all have their effects on who, how, where, and in what ways martial arts are taught and developed. The arts we learn, the longsword, sword and buckler, etc... probably had their immediate origins in the middle ages, somewhere between 400-1100 CE, most of them probably had their most immediate roots after 900 CE. They underwent serious changes with the introduction of plate armor, the development of street fighting and dueling culture in the renaissance, and with the invention of the gun. The staff and club fighting traditions are possibly much older and would probably have had fewer changes.
I'll also tell you what there isn't. There is no evidence that they came intact from anywhere else to Europe. No evidence whatsoever that these were American, Australian, Chinese, African, Indian, Cambodian, Siamese, Japanese, or Filipino. I personally am of the opinion that most of the world's martial arts have there origins not in a common source, but in the common needs imposed by violence throughout history.
Respectfully,
Ben Smith