Skip to main content
The Bruce Lee Library Research Project

The English Master of Arms: From the Twelfth to the Twentieth Century

Title

The English Master of Arms: From the Twelfth to the Twentieth Century

Author

J. D. Alyward

Description

This is a fascinating chapter of social history, not merely of fencing. It was the common custom of gentlemen to bear arms, and the background to this custom is an important aspect of the history of manners and conduct.

Changes in social conditions made the weapon an accessory to dress rather than a protective equipment; but the enthusiasm for the cult of arms increased.

Amply encouraged, the Master of Arms brought his art ever nearer to perfection; at the same time he became a recognized arbiter of conduct, for he insisted upon the exact observance of a strict code of honour, of courtesy, and of self-restraint.

Essentially unassuming, he relied for his social influence upon his own example, and he seemed to his contemporaries such an unchanging unit in the established order of life that it did not occur to them to hand down their impressions to succeeding generations. This book is an effort to remedy their omission by recording from widely scattered sources the simple annals of the English Master of Arms, of how he emerged, established his schools and taught his art.

Subject Matter

Swordfighting

Publication Year

1956

Publisher

Routledge & Kegan Paul

Language

English

Files

31354379205.jpg

Collection

Citation

“The English Master of Arms: From the Twelfth to the Twentieth Century,” The Bruce Lee Library Research Project, accessed May 16, 2025, https://www.bruceleelibrary.jamescbishop.com/lib/items/show/1649.