Hussar
Legend
1. Thanks for the explanation Hussar. What follows is meant in good spirits.
2. Because I offer a dissenting opinion to your statement of how things are termed by the majority or historical academia does not mean I need an education on how the term is used. It means I disagree with the majority usage or the term itself in its use.
Look hard enough and you'll find Latin being actively used and taught.
The fact that no one knows whether the European martial arts were taught actively and with no evidence can be assumed not taught is more a sign that the academics don't know if they are or not so instead of being called "ignorant" themselves, they call something "dead".
Of course that assumes they're using the term "ignorant" correctly and not in the negative connotation that society has put on it over the years.
KB
Yeah, thanks for taking that in the spirit it was intended, not in the snarky, knowitall crap tone that my post had.

Well, I think we can safely say that European martial arts have not been taught actively for a couple of centuries, simply because no one has actually come forward.
But, I love the fact that it's being resurrected. I just hope it starts making its way into mainstream culture as well. I'd LOVE to see a medieval historical fiction movie done based on real fighting techniques and not fencing.
It will come. I think.