Postby J.Amiel_Angeles » Sat Jan 15, 2005 9:33 am
I'm writing my masteral thesis on the Spanish conquest of the Philippines, so I've read up on of East vs West martial encounters-- although very, very few of them specifically deal with swords. Unfortunately, they were all from Spanish language sources and not very detailed. One reason why I'm so interested in WMA is because it can shed so much light on this branch of history.
There is an account of the conquistador Juan de Salcedo fighting a one-on-one sword duel with a Filipino chieftain. Both apparently used shields, but I've not yet found the primary documents on this. Salcedo won and, given the peculiarities of mandala/Southeast Asian warfare this was sufficient to break the spirit of that chieftain's army. There aren't that many detailed accounts of Spanish fighting the Filipinos hand-to-hand using their swords, though. I shall look into this some more.
Interestingly, I have not run into accounts of the Japanese in Manila (and there was a sizeable community there of Japanese expatriates, many of whom were Christians-- nobody's done a study of this but a friend found a tsuba unearthed here that had Christian crosses on it-- a Christian samurai?) fighting the Spanish. That is with the exception of the Limahong invasion and most of the people that the Spanish fought were Chinese pirates who, apparently, used mostly long spears.
What may be of some interest to this community though is that while I've not yet seen Spanish vs Japanese encounters, I have seen a lot of incidences of the Spanish USING the Japanese fighters a lot, but this was because they needed to bolster their scant manpower when fighting hordes of Filipinos. I read of one account where the Japanese were used to skirmish with rebellious Filipino pikemen and then lure them into the range of Spanish firearms. Or of another account from the 18th century, IIRC, when the Spanish were fighting Moros in the South and needed Japanese swordsmen. But this was because most Spanish soldiers were apparently conscripts with low melee fighting abilities and that the Moros learnt to attack these firearm-wielding Spaniards in the rain. The Spanish commander requested Japanese swordsmen to fight the Moros, but the plan never pushed through.
I must point out, though, that I am not inclined to believe the claims of modern Filipino Martial Arts enthusiasts with regards to the historicity of arnis and other similar arts, so the martial arts these 16th century Filipinos used could substantially be different from what we Filipinos have today, or at least the way it's currently practiced.