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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Japanese <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>, Chinese Influences on<br />

It is no surprise that Japan’s feudal society, with its samurai-dominated<br />

martial culture, spawned an abiding interest in martial arts. Although<br />

weapons techniques, primarily archery and swordsmanship, were the main<br />

traditional Japanese martial arts, today the first things that normally come<br />

to mind are jûdô and karate. <strong>The</strong>se, however, are not traditional Japanese<br />

martial arts in the purest sense. In fact, Japanese bare-handed martial arts,<br />

including sumô (grappling), which had a combat variation, have all been<br />

influenced to some degree by Chinese martial arts.<br />

<strong>The</strong> earliest Japanese historical reference to sumô traces its origins to 23<br />

B.C., but the reference itself was recorded in the first Japanese history, Nihon<br />

Shoki, in 720, using the Chinese term jueli. Another entry in the same work,<br />

dated 682, uses the current term for sumô (xiangpu in Chinese). While the<br />

Japanese, like the other peoples on China’s periphery, probably practiced an<br />

indigenous form of wrestling, they adopted Chinese terminology for it during<br />

China’s Tang dynasty (618–960), the height of Japanese cultural contact<br />

with China. <strong>The</strong>y also seem to have adopted some of the Chinese ceremonial<br />

trappings of the period, which they combined with their own customs and<br />

transmitted to the present. Like Chinese wrestling, sumô contained hand-tohand<br />

combat techniques, which were emphasized for military use from the<br />

late Heian through the Kamakura periods (ca. 1156–1392).<br />

Japanese <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>, Chinese Influences on 199

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