Fencing
History
The term fencing
derives from the Middle English fense, circa 1330, ultimately
deriving from the Latin defendere "ward off, protect," from de-
"from, away" + fendere "to strike, push". It was first used in writing
as a verb in reference to swordsmanship by Shakespeare,
in The Merry
Wives of Windsor (1598): "Alas
sir, I cannot fence."
Fencing can be
traced at least as far back as Ancient Egypt.
The earliest known depiction of a fencing bout, complete with practice
weapons, safety equipment, and judges, is a relief in a
temple near Luxor
built by Ramesses
III around 1190 BC. The Greeks and Romans had
systems of martial arts and military training that included swordsmanship,
and fencing-schools and professional champions were known throughout
medieval
Europe.
Click on picture for video.
The earliest
surviving record of Western techniques of fencing is the manuscript
known as MS I.33,
which was created in southern
Germany
c. 1300 and today resides at the Royal Armouries in Leeds.
Throughout the Middle
Ages, masters continued to teach systems for using the sword
(together with other weapons and grappling) to noble and non-noble
alike.
The wearing of
the sword with civilian dress (a custom that had begun in the late
fifteenth century on the Iberian Peninsula)
gradually gave rise to a new system of civilian swordsmanship based
more on the thrust than on the cut, with the aim being to keep the
adversary at a distance with the point, and slay him there. This gave
rise to sixteenth- and seventeenth-century systems of using the rapier and
the seventeenth and eighteenth century smallsword.
Though swords ceased to be an article of everyday dress after the
French Revolution, they continued to be used in warfare and to resolve
disputes of honor in formal duels through the nineteenth century and
into the twentieth.
Though
antagonistic competition in fencing is as old as the art itself, the
modern sport of fencing originated in the first Olympic Games in 1896.
The first few years of fencing as a sport were chaotic, with important
rule disagreements among schools of fencing from different countries,
notably the representatives of the French and Italian schools. This
state of affairs ended in 1913, with the foundation of the Fedration
Internationale d'Escrime (FIE) in
Paris. The
stated purpose of the FIE is to codify and regulate the practice of the
sport of fencing, particularly for the purpose of international
competition. The foundation of the FIE is a convenient breaking point
between the classical and the modern traditions of fencing.
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