Masters of Defence Guild of combat teachers
A. Salzmann - Épée de Godefroy de Bouillon - Jerusalem
Masters of Defence or Masters of Fencing is a widespread guild of teachers specializing in close combat military techniques with weapons, civilian fighting skills, and unarmed combat. The title was coined during the medieval period , and referred to men who were particularly skilled at the art of fighting.[ 1] [ 2]
Beginning
The first Master known to history, at least according to this article, is Master Roger (known as le Skirmisour ) of 1311 London.[ 3]
The Masters of Defence within Germany were the first to organize themselves into guilds , such as the 1480 Marxbrüder . Other guilds included the Company of St Luke (Luxbrueder) and the Federfechter .[ 1] [ 4]
Later
Organisation
Prior to the year 1540, Henry VIII of England, established the Corporation of the Masters of Defence . During 1540, an order was given to nine Masters of Fence and eleven provosts to seek out other individuals acting as instructors who were of lower-standing and ill-repute, which included details of the rules of expected behavior and right conduct for those so-called Masters. In addition, fencing schools were already made party to the rules of law during the same time-period. At about 1570, the ruler of the nation of France recognized the first association of fencing masters of his country.[ 2] [ 4] [ 5]
During the late nineteenth century and twentieth century, there were a number of masters originating in the countries of Belgium, France, Italy, and Hungary, who migrated to the United States of America.[ 6]
Personages
Fencing Masters known to history were Captain Caizo (circa sometime a little prior to July 1547), teacher of Le Sieur de Jarnac (who famously fought Lord Chastaigneraie in a duel); the 16th century Italian masters Agrippa, (Rocco Bonetti c.1570), Capo ferro , Di Grassi , Fabris , Giganti , Marozzo , and Viggiani ; Jean Baptiste le Perche du Coudray (c.1603, French); Wilhelm Kreussler father of the Kreussler dynasty, Wernesson de Liancour (c.1686); Sir William Hope (1660-1729); Henry Blackwell; James Figg (champion of the Corporation of Masters of Defence); Heinrich Wilhelm Kreussler a member of Germany's most important master fencing dynasties and teacher of Anthon Friedrich Kahn (18th century); Domenico Angelo ; La Boiëssière père and Joseph Boulogne , joint inventors of the fencing mask (c.18th century); Sainct Didier , the supposed father of modern fencing; and General Franz Siegel , the master of the first fencing school in the USA at the New York turnverein (circa.1851).[ 7] [ 8] [ 9] [ 10] [ 11] [ 12] [ 13] [ 4] [ 14] [ 5] [ 6] [ 15]
Publications
Between the 13th and 17th centuries, there were more than one hundred manuals of martial defense created by these Masters.[ 1]
Jean Baptiste le Perche du Coudray (c.1603) was the first of France's modern masters to publish.[ 14]
There is a 1711 publication by Zach Wylde on the subject.[ 16]
Amongst others, Egerton Castle wrote a text entitled Schools and Masters of Fencing: From the Middle Ages to the Eighteenth Century .[ 3]
References
1 2 3 John Clements (2001). Martial Arts of the World: R-Z . ABC-CLIO. p. 317. ISBN 1576071502 . Retrieved 2015-07-27 .
1 2 I. Borden (2006). Inside Shakespeare: Essays on the Blackfriars Stage . Susquehanna University Press. p. 132. ISBN 1575910772 . Retrieved 2015-07-27 .
1 2 Egerton Castle (2012). Schools and Masters of Fencing: From the Middle Ages to the Eighteenth Century . Dover. ISBN 978-0486138756 . Retrieved 2015-07-27 . (Master Roger le Skirmisour of 1311 - p.17)
1 2 3 Levinson, David; Christensen, Karen (1999). Encyclopedia of World Sport: From Ancient Times to the Present . Oxford University Press. p. 127. ISBN 0195131959 . Retrieved 2015-07-27 .
1 2 Turner, C.; Soper, A. (1990). Methods and Practice of Elizabethan Swordplay . SIU Press. ISBN 0809315629 . Retrieved 2015-07-27 .
1 2 Maxwell R. Garret; Emmanuil G. Kaidanov; Gil A. Pezza (1994). Foil, Saber, and Épée Fencing: Skills, Safety, Operations, and Responsibilities . Penn State Press. ISBN 0271010193 .
↑ Alfred Hutton (2012). The Sword Through the Centuries . Courier Corporation. p. 48. ISBN 978-0486149721 . Retrieved 2015-07-28 .
↑ Nadi, aldo ; Gallico, Paul (2005). Nadi on Fencing . Courier Corporation. p. 17. ISBN 0486443752 . Retrieved 2015-07-28 .
↑ Adolphe Corthey (translated by C. Slee) (2015-07-08). Fencing Through the Ages . LongEdge Press. ISBN 978-0994359001 . Retrieved 2015-07-28 .
↑ David Glasser - Article entitled Fencing Masters published by Northern Arizona University also source:explicitly for personal use only [Retrieved 2015-07-28]
↑ The National Fencing Museum of Britain - The fencing museum:16-18_century [Retrieved 2015-07-24]
↑ Alfred Hutton (2012). Old Sword Play: Techniques of the Great Masters . Courier Corporation. p. 63. ISBN 978-0486140896 . Retrieved 2015-07-28 .
↑ Donald J. LaRocca (1998). The Academy of the Sword: Illustrated Fencing Books, 1500-1800, Books 1500-1800 . Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 17 . ISBN 0870998943 . Retrieved 2015-07-28 .
1 2 N. Evangelista (1995). The Encyclopedia of the Sword . Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 301. ISBN 0313278962 . Retrieved 2015-07-27 .
↑ Harvard University . History of Fencing . Harvard Computer Society. Retrieved 2015-07-27 .
↑ Zach Wylde - English Master of Defence Wyvern Media, ISBN 1446693708 [Retrieved 2015-07-27]