I'm reasonably familiar with the (English language and translated) literature on that sort of thing. I don't see anything except the most cursory mention, usually in the same breath as lanterns as off-hand weapons.
Exactly, it's just something to use other than an empty hand.
The horsewhip is not like a stockman's whip. It's what we call a riding crop these days - a springy malacca or steel-cored stick with a short piece of leather on the distal end.
I was just referring to the use of the phrase, as in: "Get out of here or I'll hurt you!"
Buggy whips are common down here, you've got a 5' length of springy material, with about 5' of whip on the end. We use them for exercising the horses in the round pen, or on a longeing line. They're often called "horswhips" too. You can crack them, often easier than a stockman's whip, but they just make noise. The kind you describe is popular for ground work on a lead-line, and dressage.
I can see what you mean about small group encounters. But it seems more like a field-expedient weapon that a teamster or cattle-herder would use than something one would carry as a weapon on any sort of regular basis.
Right, whips used to be commonly carried, since livestock was everywhere. It would have been a lot easier to grab one a couple of hundred years ago than today, when you would actually have to carry one, a-la Indiana Jones.
Although, I wonder when the Legend of Zorro started including a whip? Was it during a time when they were still being used, I wonder?
There's another connection there. My Silat teacher's uncle (Jon de Jong) was one of Mr. De Longis' first if not the very first whip instructors.
Cool, Anthony had told me he started by just picking up a whip, until he could crack it, and then got hooked, and started seeking instruction. I don't know how many people he's learned from, but I know he developed a unique system. If you ever get a chance to take of his seminars he's got in Portland, take it -- he seems to be a great guy, at least, he was a lot of fun to work with, and he knows his stuff. They'll provide the whips, if you need it.