Everything about Bartitsu totally explained
Bartitsu is an eclectic
martial art and
self defence method originally developed in
England during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
History
In 1898,
Edward William Barton-Wright, a
British engineer who had been building
railways in
Japan, returned to England and announced the formation of a "New Art of Self Defence". This art, he claimed, combined the best elements of a range of fighting styles into a unified whole, which he'd named Bartitsu. The word was a
portmanteau of his own surname and of "Ju jitsu".
As detailed in a series of articles Barton-Wright produced for
Pearson's Magazine between 1899 and 1901, Bartitsu was largely drawn from the
Shinden Fudo,
Tenjin-Shinyo,
Fusen and Daito Ryu schools of
koryu ("classical")
jujutsu and from
Kodokan judo. As it became established in London, the art expanded to incorporate combat techniques from British
boxing, Swiss
schwingen, French
savate, and a defensive
stick fighting style that had been developed by Professeur
Pierre Vigny of
Switzerland as well as a comprehensive
physical culture training system.
In 1902, Barton-Wright wrote:
Golden years
Between 1899 and 1903, Barton-Wright set about publicising his art through magazine articles, interviews and a series of demonstrations or "assaults at arms" at various
London venues. He established a school called the Bartitsu Academy of Arms and Physical Culture, also known as the Bartitsu Club, which was located at #67b
Shaftesbury Avenue in
Soho. In an article for
Sandow's Magazine published in
1902, journalist Mary Nugent described the Bartitsu Club as "... a huge subterranean hall, all glittering, white-tiled walls, and electric light, with 'champions' prowling around it like tigers."
Via correspondence with Professor
Jigoro Kano, the founder of Kodokan Judo, and other contacts in Japan, Barton-Wright arranged for Japanese jujutsu practitioners K. Tani, S. Yamamoto and
Yukio Tani to travel to London and serve as instructors at the Bartitsu Club. K. Tani and Yamamoto soon returned to Japan, but Yukio Tani stayed and was shortly joined by another jujutsuka,
Sadakazu Uyenishi. Swiss master-at-arms
Pierre Vigny and wrestler Armand Cherpillod were also employed as teachers at the Club. As well as teaching well-to-do Londoners, their duties included performing demonstrations and competing in challenge matches against fighters representing other combat styles. In addition, the Club became the headquarters for a group of
fencing antiquarians led by
Egerton Castle and Captain
Alfred Hutton and it served as their base for experimenting with
historical fencing techniques, which they taught to members of London's acting elite for use in
stage combat.
Bartitsu Club membership included
Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon, who was later to achieve notoriety as one of the few adult male survivors of the sinking of the
RMS Titanic, as well as Captain F.C. Laing of the 12th Bengal Infantry, who subsequently wrote an article on Bartitsu stick fighting techniques which was published in the
Journal of the United Service Institution of India.
Barton-Wright later reported that, during this period, he'd challenged and defeated seven larger men within three minutes as part of a Bartitsu demonstration he gave at St. James's Hall. He said this feat earned him a membership in the prestigious
Bath Club and also a Royal Command to appear before
Edward, Prince of Wales. Unfortunately, Barton-Wright then suffered an injury to his hand, due either to a fight in a
Kentish country lane or a bicycling accident, which prevented him from appearing before the Prince.
Self defence
It is unclear whether Barton-Wright ever devised a formal
curriculum for Bartitsu as a self defence method. He encouraged members of the Bartitsu Club to study each of the four major hand-to-hand combat styles taught at the Club, with the goal of mastering each style well enough that they could be used against the others if needed. This process was similar to the modern concept of
cross-training.
Based on Barton-Wright's writings upon this subject, contemporary researchers believe that Bartitsu placed greatest emphasis upon the Vigny cane fighting system at the striking range and upon jujutsu (and, secondarily, the "all-in" style of European wrestling) at the grappling range. Savate and boxing methods were used to
segue between these two ranges, or as a means of first response should the defender not be armed with a walking stick; these sports were also probably practiced so that Bartitsu students could learn how to defend against them through the use of jujutsu and Vigny stick fighting. Barton-Wright also modified the techniques of both boxing and savate for self defence purposes, as distinct from academic and fitness training or sporting competition.
According to interviewer Mary Nugent, Barton-Wright instituted an unusual pedagogical system whereby students were first required to attend private training sessions before being allowed to join class groups. It is currently believed that both private and group classes included pre-arranged exercises, especially for use in rehearsing those techniques that were too dangerous to be performed at full speed or contact, as well as free-sparring and fencing bouts.
Many Bartitsu self defence techniques and sequences were recorded by Barton-Wright himself in his series of articles for
Pearson's Magazine. The specific details of other Bartitsu stick fighting training drills were recorded in Captain Laing's article.
Decline
Despite his enthusiasm, Barton-Wright seems to have been a mediocre promoter and the fame of his associates and their jujutsu quickly eclipsed that of Bartitsu. By 1903, the Bartitsu Club had closed its doors for the last time; subsequent speculation had it that both the enrollment fee and the tuition fees had been too high.
Most of Barton-Wright's assistants, including jujutsuka Yukio Tani and Sadakazu Uyenishi and Swiss self defence expert Pierre Vigny, established their own self defence and combat sports gymnasiums in London. After breaking with Barton-Wright, purportedly due to an argument and a fight, Tani also continued his work as a professional
music-hall wrestler under the shrewd management of William Bankier, a strength performer and magazine publisher who went by the stage name of "Apollo". Bankier's promotional efforts helped to spur an international
fad for jujutsu, which included the publication of numerous books and magazine articles as well as the establishment of jujutsu schools throughout the Western world. This fad lasted until the beginning of the
First World War and served to introduce jujutsu into Western
popular culture.
Although Barton-Wright may have continued to develop and teach his martial art at least until the 1920s, it never again returned to prominence. Bartitsu might have been completely forgotten if not for a chance mention by
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in one of his
Sherlock Holmes mystery stories. In
"The Adventure of the Empty House" (1903), Holmes explained that he'd escaped the clutches of his enemy
Professor Moriarty through his knowledge of "
baritsu, or Japanese wrestling". Doyle mis-spelled the name of the art; this error, in addition to the
anachronism of portraying Bartitsu in a story set several years before the art had actually been invented, was enough to intrigue and confuse Holmesian scholars for most of the next century.
E.W. Barton-Wright spent the remainder of his career working as a physical therapist specialising in innovative (and sometimes controversial) forms of heat, light, and radiation
therapy. He continued to use the name "Bartitsu" with reference to his various therapeutic businesses. In 1950, Barton-Wright was interviewed for an article appearing in the
Budokwai newsletter, and later that year he was presented to the audience at a
Budokwai gathering in London. He died in 1951, at the age of 90, and was buried in what the late martial arts historian Richard Bowen
described as being "a pauper's grave."
Legacy
In many ways, E.W. Barton-Wright was a man ahead of his time. He was among the first Europeans known to have studied the
Japanese martial arts, and was almost certainly the first to have taught them in Europe, the
Commonwealth of Nations or the Americas.
Bartitsu was the first martial art to have deliberately combined Asian and European fighting styles towards addressing the problems of civilian/urban
self-defence in an "unarmed society". In this, Barton-Wright anticipated
Bruce Lee's
Jeet Kune Do approach by over seventy years. Barton-Wright's philosophy of
pragmatic eclecticism was taken up by other early 20th century European self-defence specialists, including Percy Longhurst, William Garrud and Jean Joseph-Renaud, all of whom had studied with former Bartitsu Club instructors.
A similar philosophy was later to be embraced by Bill Underwood,
William E. Fairbairn and others charged with developing
close combat systems for use by
Allied troops during the
Second World War. Underwood had actually studied jujutsu with Yukio Tani and another jujutsuka,
Taro Miyake, in London during the first decade of the 20th century. The systems founded by Underwood, Fairbairn, and their contemporaries became the basis for most
military and
police close-combat training throughout the Western world during the 20th century.
E.W. Barton-Wright is also remembered as a pioneering promoter of
mixed martial arts or MMA contests, in which experts in different fighting styles compete under common rules. Barton-Wright's champions, including Yukio Tani, Sadakazu Uyenishi and Swiss
schwingen wrestler Armand Cherpillod, enjoyed considerable success in these contests, which anticipated the MMA phenomenon of the 1990s by a hundred years.
The Bartitsu Club was among the first schools of its type in Europe to offer specialised classes in women's self defence, a practice taken up after the Club's demise by students of Yukio Tani and Sadakazu Uyenishi including Edith Garrud and Emily Watts. Mrs. Garrud established her own jiujitsu
dojo (school) in London and also taught the art to members of the militant
Suffragette movement, establishing an early association between self defence training and the political philosophy of
feminism.
Contemporary interest
In 2001, the
Electronic Journals of Martial Arts and Sciences (EJMAS) web site
(External Link
) began to re-publish many of Barton-Wright's magazine articles that had been discovered in the
British Library archives by Richard Bowen. Almost immediately, the "Self Defence with a Walking Stick" articles attracted a minor
cult following and the illustrations were reproduced, often with humorous captions or other alterations, on a number of other sites.
In 2002, an international association of Bartitsu enthusiasts, known as the Bartitsu Society, was formed to research and then revive E.W. Barton-Wright's "New Art of Self Defence". The Bartitsu Society divides Bartitsu research into two related fields, those of
canonical Bartitsu (the self-defense sequences that were detailed by Barton-Wright and his assistants between 1899-1902) and
neo-Bartitsu (modern, individualised interpretations drawing especially from the training manuals produced by former Bartitsu Club instructors and their students between 1905 and the early 1920s). Associated interests include social phenomena such as street
gangsterism at the turn of the
Twentieth Century, the martial training of the militant Suffragette movement, and the study of the martial arts as
Victorian and
Edwardian social history. The Bartitsu Society communicates via an email group established by author
Will Thomas and individual members occasionally offer practical seminars in Bartitsu fighting techniques.
In August 2005, the Society published a book,
The Bartitsu Compendium, which was edited by Tony Wolf. The
Compendium details the complete history of the art as well as a technical curriculum for canonical Bartitsu. Articles on various aspects of Bartitsu have subsequently been published in journals including "Classical Fighting Arts and "Western Martial Arts Illustrated".
In September 2006, Bartitsu Society member Kirk Lawson released a
DVD entitled
Bartitsu - the Martial Art of Sherlock Holmes, which is a presentation of Bartitsu techniques as demonstrated at the Spring '06 Cumann Bhata
Western Martial Arts Seminar.
In October 2006, the Bartitsu Society launched the
Bartitsu.org
website, which includes information on the history, theory and practice of Barton-Wright's martial art.
Proceeds from the sales of the
Bartitsu Compendium and the
Martial Art of Sherlock Holmes DVD have been dedicated to creating a memorial for E.W. Barton-Wright.
Online essays by Barton-Wright
- "The New Art of Self-defence: How a Man May Defend Himself against Every Form of Attack," Pearson's Magazine, March 1899, v. 7, pp. 268-275.(External Link
)
- "The New Art of Self-defence," Pearson's Magazine, April 1899, v. 7, pp. 402-410.(External Link
)
- "Self-defence with a Walking Stick," Pearson's Magazine, February 1901, v. 11, pp. 130-139.(External Link
)
Further Information
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