Postby Gene Tausk » Tue Jan 11, 2005 11:15 am
Hi Mike:
You wrote:
"An acquantance recently posed an interesting question to me. He's one of those types who's convinced of the absolute superiority of all things Asian, and obviously doesn't think much of European martial arts"
Welcome to our world.
You wrote:
"Since the earliest manuals we have date from several decades after the first expeditions to China and east Asia, how do we know that the martial arts recorded in the manuals weren't just the European attempts to perform techniques brought back from Asia?"
First of all, your friend is incorrect. The earliest known fechtbuch, I.33 was written hundreds of years before Talhoffer and thus before these expeditions.
Second, the lands of China and Korea were well-known to the Romans (the name "China" is from the rulers of that land from the time the Romans encountered the Chinese and means "people of the Chin" referring to the Chin dynasty. The Chinese call themselves "people of the Han" referring to another dynasty and one of which they are more proud) so the idea that exchanges between China and Europe occurred only in the late Middle Ages/early Renaissance is absurd.
Third, as already pointed out by Jay Vail, we have documentation of the fighting arts of the Greeks dating back to 2500 BCE, both on vases and written accounts of pankration, boxing, wrestling and armed combat.
Fourth, if you want to consider Egypt as part of the West, then we have documentation going back even further from the bas reliefs on the tomb of Beni-Hassan, showing advanced wrestling techniques.
Fifth, we have extensive documentation (alas, no fechtbuchs however) of Roman fighting techniques in both gladiatorial combat and mass army combat.
Your friend's theory, therefore, completely fails.
Actually, Jim Aravantis, founder of modern Pankration, suggests it was the other way around; that Alexander the Great brought Greek fighting techniques to Asia when he invaded India. I really don't want to speculate on that.
In any case, as stated earlier, your friend is wrong. You might want to tell him politely, but such people are generally unwilling to listen to the facts you present. They already know everything and you are either (a) wrong or (b) ignorant.
Incidentally, John C has pointed out that English sailors encountered Japanese pirates on many occassions in the 1600's. During these combats, the sailors were armed (besides firearms) with rapiers and cut-and-thrust swords and managed to do quite well against the Japanese. If the Japanese swords and sword arts were so superior, we might be expected to hear that the English were in awe of the Japanese swords. No such documentation, to my knowledge anyway, exists.
Good luck with your friend.
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