Postby PA Schaeffer » Tue Jul 22, 2008 12:29 am
First, hello all, I'm new on this forum. I'm sorry for my bad english, but It's not my language.
I discovered ARMA website some month ago because of the essay on 'European knight vs Feudal Samourai', which was quite similar to this one, the katana being the main reason for the popular belief that samourai were the best fighter in the medieval world.
I have been practicing fencing for years in my country and I recently started the japanese Kendo, because of a friend. Of course, I tried to get some information on the history of this sport and on the art that was at its roots. I had never heard of association like ARMA and the quality of the essay lead me to conduct some personnal research, and I found what I think is some not too uninterresting informations:
I started by searching some comong ennemy of both of our warriors...
1) The common ennemy:
It's clear that there never was any battle between large groups of european and japanese warriors during the middle age, but they had a common ennemy with the mongols, that reached both eastern europe and japan.
In fact it's quite a bad idea to compare their battles against mongols because of numerous facts:
- Mongol troops attacking Japan were mainly Korean and Chinese warriors,
- Eastern european (Bulgars/Hungrian) were not really fighting with european martial art, because they were themselves descent of people coming from the center asian plains
But I found some interresting information:
- it's well known that mongol armies crushed both russian and hungarian troops, but who knows that during the battle of Legnica the order of the temple reported only 3 knights killed!, showing that heavily armored knights were not easy to kill.
- the common perception that light cavalry was superior to heavy cavalry and infantry is clearly false, according to a lot of historical battle that opposed them: Frank/Britons crusader against mamelouks and arabs, German knights against hungarian,... the most impressive is the evolution of Byzantine army as she faced Turks. Their response to light Turk cavalry was not to develop some light cavalry but rather to go back to heavy infantry supported by cataphracts, the heaviest cavalry they knew. As they opposed the Turks successfully during numerous battles before their final collapsing, we can suppose that this was the good answer. The same behavior was observed in Hungaria:
After the first invasion of their country by Mongols, the Hungarian shifted from their former asian martial organisation to the german/french model. The second invasion of the mongol was a disaster and their army was destroyed,
- Mongols never managed to take by force the european modern stone fortress and castle, but were able to take chinese/japanese and arabic castle.
let's compare to what happened in Japan:
- the mongols were attacking from the sea
- they had a very small army compared to that of the Japanese
- their invasion were repelled but mainly because of luck and the two battle that occured clearly showed that without the tremendous numerical superiority they enjoyed, the japanese samourais would have been defeated because of their lack of adaptation to other threats than theirinternal ones.
As one can see, this comparison didn't lead me to any real result, because there was too many differences between the mongolian invasion of Europe and Japan. So, I tried to search for a common commercial partner.
2) The common commercial partner
I knew that China had been in commercial relationship with both european and japanese worlds since the middle age. I found that Chinese warriors were buying japanese Katanas, considering them better than their chinese-made swords. But when they prefered over japanese swords arabic ones, because of a superior quality. You probably know that after their defeat at the battle of Tour and during the crusades, arabs tried to buy frank/german swords without success, because Charlemagne, emperor of the Frank empire had passed a law that remained in both french kingdom and Holly Roman Empire to forbid exportation of frank swords. Without being too entousiastic about european sword, one can say that if they were superior to weapon that were considered by chinese as superior to katanas, they had to be superior to katanas.
That's not a definitive statement, but I tend to like this kind of proofs, because they are based on historical and easily verified facts.
That's what I found after some personnal researchs, it's not fantastic but I would be happy to have some feedback of people having a better knowledge of history/western medieval martial art.
--- A reply to this:
" As has been known since ancient times and shown by fencers since the mid-16th century, the geometry of a straight weapon means its thrust hits more quickly..."
As an enginer, I would tend to say that I don't know why it would hit more quickly but it certainly will hit more deeply, as with the same cinetic energy, the straight weapon will have a far better penetration capacity, unless the strike follows a trajectory that as the exact form of the curved balde, which I think is totally impossible in fighting conditions, but I have absolutly no knowledge about that.