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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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a range of up to 80 meters. <strong>The</strong> wounds inflicted at such a long range were<br />

not likely to be deadly. At distances of 20 to 30 meters the weapons could<br />

connect with lethal impact.<br />

In addition, these bladed weapons were also effective for hand-to-hand<br />

combat. Most of them had a handle, and so the blade projections also served<br />

as parrying devices if needed. <strong>The</strong> iron from which the instruments were created<br />

was durable enough to stand the rigors of combat, even when one was<br />

struck against another throwing iron. Thus, the African warriors who<br />

wielded these weapons had not only a reliable projectile device that could be<br />

used for long-range combat, but also a handheld weapon for closing with the<br />

enemy. <strong>The</strong>refore, it was not uncommon for a warrior to carry three or four<br />

of these implements, always being certain to keep one in reserve.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se throwing implements were also able to serve as the backbone<br />

of a system of armed combat. Given the absence of advanced forms of armor,<br />

African warriors were able to use these throwing irons to maximum<br />

effect. Once a practitioner was able to penetrate the shield defenses of an<br />

opponent, a lethal or incapacitating wound was likely to occur, unless the<br />

recipient was able to avoid the strike. <strong>The</strong> effectiveness of these weapons<br />

against an armored opponent is unknown.<br />

Another unique weapon is found among the Nilotic peoples of the<br />

southern Sahara region. <strong>The</strong>se groups fought with wrist bracelets that incorporated<br />

a sharpened edge. Known by some groups as bagussa (Shangun;<br />

things that cause fear), the bracelets were said to be used for defense<br />

against slavers. <strong>The</strong>y were also used in ceremonial wrestling matches associated<br />

with agricultural festivals. <strong>The</strong>se distinctive weapons continue to be<br />

utilized by the East African Nilotic groups of Kenya, Somalia, and<br />

Ethiopia. For example, contemporary Turkana women of Nigeria still utilize<br />

the bracelets in self-defense. <strong>The</strong> weapons are brought into play by<br />

holding the arms in a horizontal guard position in front of the body until<br />

the opportunity arises to attack in a sweeping arc across the same plane using<br />

the razor-sharp bracelets to slash an opponent.<br />

Combat training was as essential to African martial arts as practice is<br />

for martial arts of other cultures. One of the more interesting features of<br />

African combat systems was the reliance in many systems on the rehearsal<br />

of combat movements through dances. Prearranged combat sequences are<br />

well known in various martial arts around the world, the most famous examples<br />

being the kata of Japanese and Okinawan karate. Such sequences<br />

were also practiced in ancient Greece, through the Pyrrhic war dances. <strong>The</strong><br />

African systems used drums and stringed instruments to create a rhythmic<br />

beat for fighting. Warriors, either individually or in groups, practiced using<br />

weapons, both for attacking and defensive movements, in conjunction with<br />

the rhythm from the percussion instruments. <strong>The</strong> armies of the Angolan<br />

Africa and African America 3

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