Modern "Masters"?
http://www.thearma.org/essays/ModernMasterMyth.htm
It is a concise & edifying refutation of claims to "mastery" of Medieval & Renaissance fighting skills by some modern individuals.
Enjoy
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that I the aforementioned Fiore have seen thousands that call themselves master that they are not of all four good scholars and of those four good scholars not one would be a good master
that I the aforementioned Fiore have seen thousands that call themselves master that if all put together would only make four good scholars, and those four scholars would not make one good master.
In the Renaissance, being a "fencing master," that is, a teacher of the Noble Science of Defence, meant more than acquiring an instructional rank. It was also more than founding or continuing a school by adding new material to an existing tradition because you had acquired the practice of a fighting system. The historical sources tell us titles were awarded for fighting—for demonstrating you could fight, not talk, not theorize, not pose and dance, not even just teach, but fight. If you could prove you knew your stuff and could hold your own against, or even best, your seniors then you obviously knew what you were doing, and knowing it you could pass it along to others you trained. The whole point was to display that your prowess in these survival skills was functionaly suited to real self-defense.
Jeffrey Hull wrote:Here is a new editorial by John Clements![]()
Modern "Masters"?
http://www.thearma.org/essays/ModernMasterMyth.htm
It is a concise & edifying refutation of claims to "mastery" of Medieval & Renaissance fighting skills by some modern individuals.
Enjoy
Paul Macdonald wrote:Following Mr. Clement`s article and the praise given its content by various group members, I am now somewhat confused by the sudden ideas that appear to rail completely against the articles main argument.
It suggests that "It immensely foolish for anyone now to claim to be "master" of historical teachings." and that "Time has severed the links."
Why then does this same group now consider that not only a WMA Masters programme is achievable, but that practicing martial artists today might possibly ever achieve the supposed near-legendary calibre required to claim such title?
Jeffrey Hull wrote:However, we could still test achievement at martial arts, including at our beloved Kunst des Fechtens, by prize-playing and so forth. I think that would be more reasonable than the hokey mutual-reciprocation, the self-serving declaration, the cross-disciplinary equivocation / conflation of titles of "mastery" that too many hucksters, liars and phonies so annoyingly insist to be legitimate in these our modern times.
Gianluca Zanini wrote:I found this article enough interesting to make a translation as to share it with the italian speaking people.
In my opinion it is a himn to the seriousness and a good service to the WMA community.
Therefore I post it here, just in case someone likes to share it in somewhere.![]()
E' un evidente dato storico che oggi non esiste nessun "Maestro", ne è mai esisitito per diversi secoli, delle arti da combattimento medioevali e rinascimentali...etc.
Gianluca
Jaron Bernstein wrote:"I would also like to add something to the point about students having a "lack of real-life combat experience using these techniques."
"Unfortunately, several of my students have in the past found themselves in undesirable live situations, facing sharp weapons where they have had no choice but to defend themselves and overcome their opponents.
I am glad for them to say that in each case they applied their martial training effectively enough to do so in life threatening situations.
Masters never trained their students historically to go out there and find fights so that they could test their abilities. The application of your skills with sharps against another was an absolute last resort. If you found yourself in an undesirable situation and had no choice, then you used what you were taught.
Whatever your opinions on masters, the unfortunate testing ground of live encounter still exists today."
Good post. I would first state that the historical masters did indeed prepare their students to go out and seek fights in the context of military or feudal service. Also, a number of the masters had used their arts in battle. I believe Fiore references having fought 5 duels![]()
Secondly, the environment that produced what I would consider to be a master skill level of these arts is in our world analagous to soccer (or football if your prefer) and computer programming. We have many footballers and computer programmers of great skill because they exist in a world where those arts are in wide currency. Thus you have a vast feeder pool to produce a David Beckham or a Pele. Without that feeder pool, you might get footballers, but not at that level. The "feeder pool" that existed to produce a Ringeck, Fiore or Meyer has long dried up. You do have some historical fencers (why else are we here?) today, but not masters of historical fencing.
This bears on the unfortunate live encounters your students have had. They did indeed emerge safely, which says that the HF skills, luck, the situation, their training and natural attributes all conspired in some combination to help them emerge unscathed. Live encounters exist today, but it takes more than just that to pruduce a master, even it does yield a fighter able to defend themselves today. It takes a social/cultural framework in addition.
In current martial arts usage I would point to something like maybe "master" level in those specific arts among the very top levels today in MMA, Judo or Muay Thai. I say this because for every Chuck Liddel, Jigoro Kano or the grand champion of the Lumphini Stadium, you have thousands of people who watch, support and train in those arts. If your pond is small (as WMA is), your fish aren't going to be of "master" size, even if they do swim and have gills.
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