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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Illustration published in 1958 of a victorious gladiator standing over his defeated opponent as the crowd gives the<br />

thumbs down, indicating death, at the Colosseum in Rome. (Library of Congress)<br />

ditions. For example, the contemporary Russian martial art of sambo (an<br />

acronym in Russian for “self-defense without weapons”) draws on both<br />

European and Asian systems for its repertoire of techniques. Sambo was<br />

developed in the 1920s by Anatolij Kharlampiev, who spent years traveling<br />

around the former Soviet Union analyzing and observing the native fighting<br />

systems. He duly recorded and freely borrowed techniques from Greco-<br />

Roman and freestyle wrestling (from the Baltic States), Georgian jacket<br />

wrestling, Khokh (the traditional fighting system of Armenia), traditional<br />

Russian wrestling, Turkish wrestling systems from Azerbaijan and Central<br />

Asia, and Kôdôkan Jûdô. <strong>The</strong> result was a fighting system that was so effective<br />

that when it was first introduced by European jûdôka (Japanese;<br />

jûdô practitioners) in the early 1960s, the Soviets won every match. <strong>The</strong><br />

Soviets also were the first to best the Japanese at their own sport of jûdô in<br />

the 1972 Munich Olympics. <strong>The</strong> Soviet competitors were sambo practitioners<br />

cross-trained in jûdô rules.<br />

An example of the redefinition of Asian martial arts can be found in<br />

the 1990s craze of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. Although accounts of the creation of<br />

Europe 117

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