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About this quote, medieval martial arts are not only for demostration purpouses, i mean, you are not going to kill anybody, but in the past those techniques were used in war, to shred blood. So demonstration purpouse during festival ocassions, could be, but remember that Japanese samurais, European Knights and Massai warriors are trained to kill, not to entertain.The Hausa's Gangi not only perform their weapons based martial art for demonstrations purposes during festival ocassions, they use them in real disputes after the hunting expeditions when one Gangi challenges the hunter/associated Gangi prowess of another. Serious injury and death are often the results, so these are not armchair enthusiasts.
The use of one versus two swords may be cultural/systems based as well. Given the emphasis of thrusting in the European traditions, as opposed to, say, my own African traditions (such as that of the Gangi, whose weapons use features double sword and" machete" based techniques as well as Kaskara use-the Gangi are the traditional warrior/hunters of the Hausa- examples of whom are found across Western Africa- speaking peoples of Nigeria), it does not appear to have been of practical use in the European based systems.
Everyone has their own preference. Many would argue both ways and neither would be wrong.P.D. Are bastard swords more versatile than two handers? (Talking about being in the middle of the battlefield foot fighting against heavy and lightly armored senemies)
This is just like saying that medieval European arming swords can be effectively used with modern sport fencing techniques. Kendo, like fencing, is a highly stylized martial art, and its movement patterns are now geared more towards speed and making obvious scoring hits rather than practical fighting application. It is still considered a good swordsmanship training device, but mostly for its role in sharpening the speed and competitive instincts -- not for its techniques.But Katanas are very effective in kendo techs.
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