Postby Chris Thompson » Thu Nov 18, 2004 4:58 pm
>Who said they were deluded? I think the authors knew precisely whom they wanted to impress with their manuals -- folks who were not Highlanders or Gaels, especially when dealing with small-sword.>
Obviously Highlanders were not the audience for these manuals, as most Highlanders at the time were not English-speakers or literate.
You can go to any Borders store and buy a book called "Bokken: Art of the Japanese Sword" by Dave Lowry. Mr Lowry is not Japanese, and his book is not in Japanese, but he is a swordsman of the Yagyu Shinkage style, and his book shows genuine Japanese swordsmanship (though in simplified form).
I see the Highland broadsword manuals in the same light. Remember, though, that a few of these manuals were written by native Highlanders. They wrote in English because most of the market for books was in the English-speaking community. Also, some Gaelic-speakers even today are literate in English but not in Gaelic.
>Though one must broach the question of how it is that we have Yellow Book of Lecan, the Book of Leinster, and Book of Dun Cow, and illuminated MSs like Kells, yet no one ever seems to think of these as proof of early Celtic tradition of literacy>
Certainly there was an early Celtic tradition of literacy, but it was largely restricted to an elite and to certain topics. Traditional skills such as music, dance etc were passed down orally and still are. Gaelic oral tradition was collected by folklorists in the 19th century into such collections as the Dewar Mss and the Popular Tales of the West Highlands. It matches well with what we find in the manuals. For instance, MacGregor mentions wandering swordsmen who would go from town to town challeging each town to provide them with a worthy opponent or pay them off with a fee. There are a number of Gaelic stories that describe this custom in more detail, such as "Domhnull Og n h-Alba." MacGregor and Page mention that Highlanders in single combat would seek to disarm or wound their foes rather than kill them, and again Gaelic oral tradition fully confirms this. The Highland broadsword manuals list seven cuts, and Logan in 1838 mentions that Highland swordplay had seven cuts. A few years ago the Gaelic scholar Dr Michael Newton sent me an account of a duel between two Highland swordsmen which actually states that one of the antagonists was slain by "cut 7." (Sorry, I don't have the original source on this one.)
Details of technique do not appear in the oral tradition, but cultural details do. And these corroborate the surviving manuals, showing that the authors were at least to some extent familiar with Highland culture and sword customs.
-Chris Thompson