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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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fighting matches, a favorite village pastime, both<br />

combatants often were severely injured.<br />

Russians also have a long history of indigenous<br />

wrestling traditions. Accounts from writers in<br />

the 1700s describe wrestling matches that lasted a<br />

great portion of the day, ending only when the victor<br />

had his opponent in a joint lock. We also know<br />

that as the Russian Empire expanded into Central<br />

Asia, the officers would write of native wrestling<br />

systems. Local wrestling champions from these conquered<br />

areas sometimes would be pitted against soldiers<br />

from the invading armies. Joint locks and<br />

choke holds were commonly mentioned as ways<br />

that such fights ended.<br />

As they began the exploration and conquest of<br />

the globe, Western Europeans carried their martial<br />

systems with them. <strong>The</strong> Spanish, for example, maintained<br />

their own venerable method of fighting, La<br />

Destreza (literally, “dexterity,” “skill,” “ability,” or<br />

“art”—more loosely used to mean “Philosophy of<br />

the Weapons” or “<strong>The</strong> Art and Science” of fighting).<br />

Spanish strategic military science and the personal<br />

skill of soldiers played a major role in the defeat<br />

of their opposing empires in the Americas and<br />

in the Philippines. It has been suggested in fact that<br />

the native fighting systems of these islands and<br />

Spanish techniques are blended in the modern Filipino<br />

martial arts.<br />

Also during this time, new Western unarmed<br />

combat systems were being created and refined.<br />

Two examples that are still with us today are French savate and Brazilian<br />

capoeira. Since both systems developed as street combat styles rather than<br />

among the educated and literate classes, the origins of both are subjects of<br />

speculation and the oral traditions generated by such conjecture.<br />

According to popular tradition, capoeira is a system of hand-to-hand<br />

combat developed by African slaves transplanted to work on the Portuguese<br />

plantations of Brazil. <strong>The</strong> style of fighting involves relatively little<br />

use of the hands for blocking or striking as compared to foot strikes, trips,<br />

and sweeps, and it often requires the practitioner to assume an inverted position<br />

through handstands and cartwheels. One of the most popular explanations<br />

for these unique characteristics is that with their hands chained, the<br />

African slaves took their native dances, which often involved the use of<br />

This “art of fighting”<br />

also included the art<br />

of wrestling and<br />

ground fighting<br />

known as Unterhalten<br />

(“holding down”) and<br />

close-quarters takedowns<br />

and grappling<br />

moves, shown here in<br />

this Albrecht Düerer<br />

illustration.<br />

(Courtesy of John<br />

Clements)<br />

Europe 115

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