The War of the Fists: Popular Culture and Public Violence in Late Renaissance Venice
It's focus is stick fighting over a bridge, not boxing, but there is a lot of boxing in it.
It's very interesting because there's quite a lot established in Italian boxing history that seems to be accredited to English boxers today.
Stuff like gloves for example.
If you want some well respected authority to tell you Broughton looked at statues of Greeks to re-invent the modern boxing glove just read his page on CBZ.
However Broughton was a guy trained by Figg and Figg's first star pupil was a fella named Bob Whittaker who fought a Venetian boxer in the first international fight a decade before Jack is champion.
I find it pretty suspect myself. How on earth could Broughton be ignorant to the gloves used by Italians in his own time but not ignorant to the gloves used by Greeks thousands of years before his own time?
I'm not far enough in the book to compare the Venetian side of the Whittaker fight to the English story so I don't know if it is addressed or not, but that's just one example anyway.
I could be wrong, but, my eyes caught 25ish times the word boxing was used. I'm sure there's even more times when the author is talking about boxing but doesn't need to use the word.
If you're interested in where **** came from it is a really good book. Not a lot of answers, but, it did show me my questions were wrong in the first place. I'm going to do less digging in the bare knuckle guys and more into the duelists of the knights' era.
It's focus is stick fighting over a bridge, not boxing, but there is a lot of boxing in it.
It's very interesting because there's quite a lot established in Italian boxing history that seems to be accredited to English boxers today.
Stuff like gloves for example.
If you want some well respected authority to tell you Broughton looked at statues of Greeks to re-invent the modern boxing glove just read his page on CBZ.
However Broughton was a guy trained by Figg and Figg's first star pupil was a fella named Bob Whittaker who fought a Venetian boxer in the first international fight a decade before Jack is champion.
I find it pretty suspect myself. How on earth could Broughton be ignorant to the gloves used by Italians in his own time but not ignorant to the gloves used by Greeks thousands of years before his own time?
I'm not far enough in the book to compare the Venetian side of the Whittaker fight to the English story so I don't know if it is addressed or not, but that's just one example anyway.
I could be wrong, but, my eyes caught 25ish times the word boxing was used. I'm sure there's even more times when the author is talking about boxing but doesn't need to use the word.
If you're interested in where **** came from it is a really good book. Not a lot of answers, but, it did show me my questions were wrong in the first place. I'm going to do less digging in the bare knuckle guys and more into the duelists of the knights' era.
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