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E-raamat: Moving the Past: Embodied Research on Discontinued Movement Cultures

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Access Archaeology
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781805831938
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Access Archaeology
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781805831938
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Moving the Past explores the challenges of studying discontinued movement culturespractices and embodied skills that have lost their continuity and are no longer living traditions. Comprising seven chapters, the volume combines detailed case studies with theoretical insights to address a core question: What kind of knowledge about the past can be gained when researchers use their own bodies to relearn skills preserved solely in historical and archaeological sources? Case studies examine topics ranging from ancient Greek hoplite warfare to Victorian-era Irish wrestling, medieval military drills and physical exercise regimens, and early-modern fencing. These focused analyses are complemented by a theoretical chapter and a Coda, investigating the methods, promises, and limitations of experiential research on discontinued movement cultures. The book arises from a 2021 conference panel, Experimental and Experiential Research in Archaeology, organised by the Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw (Poland). Its contributors include archaeologists, historians, anthropologists, and independent researchers with a shared interest in historical embodied practices. This interdisciplinary mix ensures a diverse perspective, appealing to academics and practitioners of re-enactment, living history, and public archaeology alike.
Acknowledgements


Author Biographies


Introduction Maciej Talaga


Chapter
1. Triangle of Diverging Incentives. Methods for Reconstruction of
Personal Combat Techniques Bartomiej Walczak


Chapter
2. Leveraging Reenactment and Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA)
for the Understanding of Ancient Combat Paul M. Bardunias and Benjamin R.
Truska


Chapter
3. Crooks, Hooks, Trips, and Taps. Reconstructing Irish Collar and
Elbow Wrestling Ruadhán MacFadden


Chapter
4. Gripping Affordances of Select Post-Medieval European Sidearms
Jerzy Miklaszewski


Chapter
5. Boots on the Ground: Late-Medieval Infantry Marches and
Infrastructure Charles Lin


Chapter
6. Going Medieval on the Body. An Autoethnographic Study on a
Late-Medieval Fighters Physical Conditioning Regimen Maciej Talaga and
Krzysztof Kozak


Coda: Why Moving the Past? Maciej Talaga


References 
Maciej Talaga, PhD, is an archaeologist and anthropologist specialised in the Central-European Late Middle Ages. His main research interests revolve around pre-modern body and movement cultures, especially late-medieval German martial arts, as well as embodied and self-reflective methodologies in the study of the past. Currently working as Assistant Professor at the University of Warsaw, he conducts parallel research projects on medieval martial culture and contemporary folk wrestling as part of intangible cultural heritage.