In 2001, the
Electronic Journals of Martial Arts and Sciences (EJMAS) web site began to re-publish many of Barton-Wright's magazine articles that had been discovered in the
British Library archives by Richard Bowen. Almost immediately, the "Self Defence with a Walking Stick" articles attracted a minor
cult following and the illustrations were reproduced, often with humorous captions or other alterations, on a number of other sites. Also in that year, Bartitsu stick fighting demonstrations were added to the educational displays performed at the
Royal Armouries in
Leeds, U.K. In 2002, an international association of Bartitsu enthusiasts, known as the Bartitsu Society, was formed to research and then revive E.W. Barton-Wright's "New Art of Self Defence". The Society approaches Bartitsu research and training via two related fields, those of
canonical Bartitsu (the self-defence sequences that were detailed by Barton-Wright and his associates 1899–1902) and neo-Bartitsu (modern, individualised interpretations drawing from the canon but reinforced by the training manuals produced by former Bartitsu Club instructors and their students between 1899 and the early 1920s). The modern revival aims to both preserve what is known of the canonical syllabus and to continue Barton-Wright's
experiments in cross-training/testing between (kick)boxing, jiujitsu and stick fighting as they were practiced circa 1901, on the premise that these experiments were left as a
work in progress when the original Bartitsu Club closed down. Thus, the revival is considered to be a deliberately
anachronistic, collaborative, open-ended and
open source project. Associated interests include the study of the martial arts as
Victorian and
Edwardian social history. Between 2002-2019 the Bartitsu Society communicated via an email group established by author
Will Thomas. From 2003 onwards, members of the Bartitsu Society began to teach seminar courses in various aspects of the art at
stage combat and martial arts conferences throughout the world. Inspired and guided by the Bartitsu Society and the two compendia, Bartitsu training programs have since been launched at the Cumann Bhata Dayton, the Vancouver-based Academie Duello, at the Alte Kampfkunst in Wuppertal, Germany, Briercrest College and Seminary in Caronport, Saskatchewan and at Forteza Fitness and Martial Arts (Ravenswood, Chicago) amongst numerous other locations. In August 2005, the Society published a book,
The Bartitsu Compendium, which was edited by Tony Wolf. (August 2008) comprises resources for neo-Bartitsu drawn both from Barton-Wright's own writings and from the self-defence manuals produced by his colleagues and their students, including Yukio Tani, William Garrud, H.G. Lang and
Jean Joseph Renaud. Proceeds from the sales of the
Bartitsu Compendium, the
Bartitsu Compendium II, and the
Martial Art of Sherlock Holmes DVD have been dedicated to creating a memorial for E.W. Barton-Wright and to furthering the revival of Bartitsu. A third volume of the
Bartitsu Compendium was published in December 2022, marking the 120th anniversary of the closing of the original Bartitsu Club and the 20th anniversary of the modern revival movement. Subheaded "What Bartitsu Was and What It Can Be", this volume includes an authoritative social history of Bartitsu and anthology of historical articles as well as a technical section highlighting the stylistically unique aspects of Bartitsu as a martial art. In September 2006, Bartitsu Society member Kirk Lawson released a
DVD entitled
Bartitsu – the Martial Art of Sherlock Holmes, which is a presentation of Bartitsu techniques as demonstrated at the Spring '06 Cumann Bhata
Western Martial Arts Seminar. In October 2006, the Bartitsu Society launched the Bartitsu.org website, which included information on the history, theory and practice of Barton-Wright's martial art, as well as current events relating to the Bartitsu revival. In 2019 the site suffered a catastrophic technical failure and it was revived in January 2021 as BartitsuSociety.com. In 2010, a seminar tour was arranged to raise awareness of Bartitsu. Tony Wolf taught consecutive seminars on the West Coast of the US starting in California and moving to Northwest Fencing Academy and then Academia Duellatoria in Oregon. Seminars were then hosted by the School of Acrobatics and New Circus Arts in Seattle, Washington and at Academie Duello in Vancouver, British Columbia. In August 2009, the Bartitsu Society announced the production of a full-length documentary on E.W. Barton-Wright and his self-defence arts, which was released in March 2011. The first international Bartitsu School of Arms seminar/conference event was held in London, U.K. between August 26–28, 2011 and the second event was held in Chicago, between 7–9 September 2012. In 2017, Bartitsu came to the attention of a martial arts instructor in
Columbus, Georgia. After researching the combat laboratory methods used by the founder and his instructors to add more defence tactics and skills incorporating more ground defence, additional self-defence moves, and basic knife tactics and defences, he took on his first student. He then founded an academy, christened "Neo-Bartitsu Columbus", in 2019 and began offering weekly classes through Bishop's TaeKwonDo Plus. In the UK, Sensei Tommy Moore runs the Bartitsu Lab. This Bartitsu club aims to bring together the best of the combat sports and self defence focuses of Bartitsu as part of a modern holistic approach. Articles on various aspects of Bartitsu have been published in journals including
Classical Fighting Arts,
Western Martial Arts Illustrated,
The Journal of Asian Martial Arts,
SteamPunk Magazine,
Rugged Magazine,
Breaking Muscle,
The Wall Street Journal,
The Atlantic, the
Chicago Tribune,
The Chap,
History Today,
de Volkskrant,
New City,
His Vintage Life, the
Epoch Times,
Ozy Media and
Clarkesworld Magazine. The art has also been showcased on British television in
The One Show,
Sunday Brunch and in
Everybody was Kung Fu Fighting: the Rise of the Martial Arts in Britain, an episode of the Timeshift documentary series on
BBC Four. == 2011 documentary ==