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Knives and the City: Violence, Regulation, and Resistance in Medieval Urban Life

The next in a series of online talks hosted by the KAS, with Jason Hulott, chief instructor at Canterbury Medieval Combat.

Exploring knife violence during the 14th to 16th centuries in Europe, highlighting the dual roles of knives as practical tools and weapons of violence. It examines legislative efforts to curb knife crime, the emergence of fighting knives, and the rise of self-defence systems taught through martial manuscripts in response to societal unrest.  We will cover reports from major english cities as well as his own research into murders and knife crime in medieval Canterbury.

Jason Hulott is chief instructor at Canterbury Medieval Combat. With over 25 years of experience, He specialises in Japanese Iaijutsu and Kenjutsu, and for the past 10 years, been focused on European medieval combat, primarily the German tradition. His training spans military, judicial, self-defence, and sport systems, allowing him to teach a wide range of topics - including Bartitsu and WW1 trench fighting - always with context and practical weapon handling.

Joining instructions for this online event will be distributed closer to the time.

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24 January

Moated sites in the south-east conference

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4 February

Medieval Pilgrimages - Understanding what role our prominent churches may have played in these journeys