
Originally Posted by
AJ Camacho
I can definitely respect the forethought and mindset of Wright. And though Bartitsu is only presenting itself as a historical or recreational interest who are the practitioners behind this progression? From many of the small snippets I have seen these practitioners seem to generally come from a traditional martial arts or stunt background ironically not the same background which inspired wright's discoveries. How will that effect the modern iteration of Bartitsu? Or are there any high level submission grapplers or judokas who are taking the reigns on this development?
Excellent questions, thanks.
The MA backgrounds of the most serious revivalists (and we're only talking about a small number of people at present) range all over the map; traditional styles, combat sports, RBSD, police combatives etc. The average experience level would probably be fifteen years in various styles.
I doubt that we'll ever attract many high level sub-grapplers or competitive judoka in that so much of the Bartitsu curriculum is irrelevant to modern competitive combat sport. Having said that, we do have some senior people in those areas (especially Kodokan judo) who are supporting the revival from the academic perspective.
Re. our training backgrounds impacting the modern iterations of Bartitsu; Barton-Wright's articles offer a concrete curriculum of about 40 self defence-oriented sequences (paired jiujitsu kata and walking stick defence "set plays", equivalent to two-man kata). These are pretty straightforward and are easy enough to reconstruct. They serve as our bridge back to B-W's original art, but they're obviously incomplete - there was much more going on at the Bartitsu Academy than he detailed in his articles. There are several key areas in which all we have to go on are cryptic hints and clues.
From the POV of continuing Barton-Wright's experiments in MA cross-training, modern Bartitsu revivalists base from the original art but are free to add their own points of emphasis, training methods, etc. My own approach tends to "springboard" off the classical Bartitsu sequences into various freestyle drills, still drawing from the repertoires of circa 1900 boxing, the Vigny stick method and "British jiujitsu".
To answer the last question, yes, I've been very deeply involved in the revival from the outset. I edit the EJMAS journal that brought B-W's articles to light back in 2001 and also both volumes of the Bartitsu Compendium (2005 and 2008). I've written numerous articles on the subject and regularly teach Bartitsu seminars at MA conferences; I'm also currently co-producing a feature-length documentary on Bartitsu.