It was about the years that a craftsman spent on the road traveling from town to town, learning the nuances of their trade, before they could become a Master. Usually this lasted for a year and a day. The medieval tradition never entirely died out in Germany (though the Nazis banned it for a while) and it is still practiced by carpenters, and is making a revival today and spreading somewhat to other trades.
These guys are dressed in the traditional clothing you have to wear, and once you start the journey you are not allowed to go within 50 miles of your home town until you have completed your voyage.
Check out the wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journeyman_years
Now I wonder, did men like Lichtenauer, Fiore, Ringeck, Joachim Meyer, go on journeys for a year and a day, traveling from town to town, learning the nuances of their craft ?
Here is perhaps the most titilating bit. While on their journeyman years, a young compagnon carried a traveling book called a Wanderbuch which would be stamped in each town he visited, and would be a kind of journal of their travels. Supposedly this practice went back to the Medieval period.
I think it would be pretty cool to find one of those for a journeyman fencer seeking to become a Master.
Maybe some of our German friends could enlighten us a bit more about this practice?
