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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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A picture of a Zulu<br />

warrior holding a<br />

large shield and a<br />

short spear (assagai)<br />

characteristic of their<br />

armed combat<br />

system. This<br />

illustration appeared<br />

in a British publication<br />

during the war<br />

between British<br />

settlers and the native<br />

population in Africa,<br />

1851. (Corbis)<br />

2 Africa and African America<br />

was of greater significance as magical<br />

than as practical protection. In fact,<br />

magical powers were attributed to most<br />

West African weapons and defenses.<br />

Even without metallurgy, other groups<br />

produced lethal clubs, staves, and spears<br />

with stone points. African societies,<br />

some of them small states with standing<br />

armies, were militarily formidable even<br />

without the trappings of their European<br />

and Middle Eastern contemporaries.<br />

Among the armed combat systems<br />

that developed were the ones that were<br />

used by the Zulu peoples of South<br />

Africa. <strong>The</strong> Zulu were proficient in<br />

combat with club, spear, and shield. Because<br />

they lacked body armor, the shield<br />

became the protective device used by the<br />

Zulu warriors. <strong>The</strong>y initiated combat by<br />

either throwing a spear at the opponent<br />

or using it for a charge. When spear<br />

combat became impractical because of<br />

the range, the club was used for closequarters<br />

combat. <strong>The</strong> club-and-shield combination could be used in ways<br />

similar to the sword-and-shield combination of warriors in Europe.<br />

This type of fighting gave the Zulu an advantage in combat, as they<br />

had all of their ranges covered. <strong>The</strong> spear could either be used as a pole-arm<br />

weapon that allowed the warrior to fight from a distance or as a shortrange<br />

stabbing weapon. In fact, Shaka Zulu revolutionized indigenous warfare<br />

by the use of massed formations and of the assagai (a stabbing spear<br />

with a shortened shaft) in conjunction with a redesigned shield. Modern use<br />

of the spear in traditional Zulu ceremonies has demonstrated that they continue<br />

to be able to use the spear in conjunction with the shield effectively. If<br />

the spear was lost, then clubs were used for effective close-range combat.<br />

Perhaps no weapon signifies African martial arts more than the<br />

throwing iron. <strong>The</strong>se instruments had many names from the different peoples<br />

that used them. <strong>The</strong>y have been known as mongwanga and hungamunga.<br />

Many cultures have developed throwing weapons, from sticks to<br />

the famous shuriken of the Japanese Ninja. Similarly, many African societies<br />

placed a premium on these types of weapons. <strong>The</strong> throwing irons were<br />

multibladed instruments that, when thrown, would land with one of the<br />

blade points impaling its target. <strong>The</strong>se weapons were reported effective at

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