To All Concerned,
I am a young Museum professional looking to apply a few new things to the living history field. As most of our sites are military, I would like to develop in-depth programs on The Enlisted Man's Military Martial Arts of the 18th Century. I am having a few issues with this, and would like some advise or direction if possible.
First, the vast majority of the martial arts which the enlisted soldiers would have known on enlistment would have been folk-styles from their regions. These would include such things as Quarterstaff, Cane, Various types of Knife-combat, and some unarmed techniques as well. I am finding very little on these subjects. Is there somewhere I am not looking that should be obvious?
Literary sources point to these arts being learned across Europe, and being applied in civilian combat all the bloody time. However, no one describes the techniques in detail, as it seems everyone already knew them, and therefore didn't need the description.
Secondly, I am looking for the Soldier's Bag Of Dirty Tricks in regards to the three main weapons trained in by all armies at that time, notably Bayonet (fixed and alone), Hangar, and Small Sword.
I have manuals by Angelo, Blackwell, P.J.F. Girrard, and Parkyns (wrestling). I have literary sources from Menetra, and a host of others in the Gentleman's magazine, etc.
Further, I have a background in some Quarterstaff, and a solid understanding of Epee fencing in the modern tradition. I have also done some Asian martial arts in college, as well as some western grappling and throwing. Where do I go from here?

