enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pugil stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pugil_stick

    The pugil stick is similar to a quarterstaff or Japanese bo and may be marked to indicate the end that represents the bayonet and the one that is the rifle butt. Dr. Armond H. Seidler, of the University of New Mexico, invented the pugil stick training method during World War II.

  3. United States Air Force Basic Military Training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Air_Force...

    It is a 4-day exercise that will test all of the CBRNE skills that the trainees were taught in the fifth week of training. The trainees will also be taught basic combatives as well as engaging in pugil stick battles utilizing the rifle fighting techniques they were taught. The trainees are required to wear body armor and helmets, as well as two ...

  4. Stick-fighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stick-fighting

    Stick-fighting, stickfighting, or stick fighting, is a variety of martial arts which use simple long, slender, blunt, hand-held, generally wooden "sticks" for fighting, such as a gun staff, bō, jō, walking stick, baston, arnis sticks or similar weapons.

  5. Armond Seidler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armond_Seidler

    The following year, he developed the pugil stick system of close-quarters combat, using metal poles that were padded at the ends. [4] Inspired by boxing movements, his pugil sticks were intended to replace the outdated training that recruits of the Marine Corps had been receiving previously, allowing them to strike each other with more force ...

  6. List of practice weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_practice_weapons

    This list of practice weapons, is of weapons specifically designed for practice in different martial arts from around the world.Unlike those in the list of martial arts weapons article, many of which are designed to be effective weapons, generally those listed here are blunted or otherwise designed for safe regular practice and training.

  7. Italian martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_martial_arts

    Italian martial arts include all those unarmed and armed fighting arts popular in Italy between the Bronze age until the 19th century AD. It involved the usage of weapons (swords, daggers, walking stick and staff). Each weapon is the product of a specific historical era.

  8. Bōjutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bōjutsu

    Bōjutsu (Japanese: 棒術, lit. 'staff technique') is the martial art of stick fighting using a bō, which is the Japanese word for staff. [1] [2] Staffs have been in use for thousands of years in Asian martial arts like Silambam.

  9. Singlestick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singlestick

    Singlestick is a martial art that uses a wooden stick as its weapon. It began as a way of training soldiers in the use of backswords (such as the sabre or the cutlass). [1] Canne de combat, a French form of stick fighting, is similar to singlestick play, which also includes a self-defense variant with a walking stick.