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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Kagamisato (left)<br />

and Yoshibayama<br />

(right), Japanese<br />

sumô wrestlers<br />

during a match in<br />

Tokyo, 1952. In<br />

addition to native<br />

elements, sumô<br />

shows evidence of<br />

Chinese influence.<br />

(Library of<br />

Congress)<br />

Establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate (1603) included strict control<br />

over weapons and the activities of the samurai class, but encouraged<br />

their continued cultivation of a “martial spirit.” In this environment,<br />

jûjutsu and ultimately jûdô developed. Meanwhile, in China, Zheng<br />

Ruozeng’s Strategic Situation in Jiangnan had been published (ca. 1568). In<br />

addition to discussing the strategic situation in China’s coastal provinces<br />

and mid-sixteenth-century campaigns against Japanese marauders, it lists<br />

martial arts styles, including escape and seizing techniques (pofa, jiefa, na),<br />

among boxing styles of the period. Also, the Complete Book of Miscellany<br />

(1612 and 1746 editions) contains illustrations of some of these techniques<br />

with a hint of jûjutsu in them. At the same time, some Chinese migrated to<br />

Japan in the wake of the Manchu conquest in 1644. One of these, Chen<br />

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

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