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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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344 Mongolia<br />

to gain punching power. Open-hand techniques to the eyes, ears, throat, and<br />

solar plexus are used. Elbow techniques are used extensively.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se techniques require little strength but have devastating results;<br />

an elbow strike to the face or floating ribs can easily disable an opponent.<br />

Throwing techniques are not the type usually seen in jûdô or sambo; they<br />

have more in common with freestyle wrestling takedowns. Krav maga has<br />

been called the “first unarmed combat system of the twentieth century.”<br />

This is meant to convey the fact that it developed in the twentieth century<br />

with the understanding and awareness of modern combat. Firearms were<br />

the weapons of choice for twentieth-century warriors, as they are for those<br />

of the twenty-first century, and terrorism and sudden violence often define<br />

the battlefield in the modern world.<br />

<strong>The</strong> martial arts systems of the Middle East are a unique chapter in<br />

the fighting skills of the world. This area is the cradle of civilization, so it<br />

is no great surprise that many of the first fighting arts were practiced here<br />

as well. Since many trade routes existed through these regions, it is also not<br />

surprising that the techniques and styles from various civilizations can be<br />

seen. In this respect, perhaps the fighting arts of the Middle East are among<br />

the most eclectic in the world.<br />

Gene Tausk<br />

See also Africa and African America; Krav Maga; Pankration; Stickfighting,<br />

Non-Asian; Wrestling and Grappling: China; Wrestling and Grappling:<br />

Europe<br />

References<br />

Gardiner, E. Norman. 1930. Athletics of the Ancient <strong>World</strong>. Oxford:<br />

Clarendon Press.<br />

Gluck, Jay. 1962. Zen Combat. New York: Ballantine.<br />

Hitti, Philip Khoury. 1970. History of the Arabs: From the Earliest Times to<br />

the Present. New York: St. Martin’s.<br />

Lichtenfeld, Imi, and Eyal Yanilov. 1998. Krav Maga: Self Defense and<br />

Fighting Tactics. Tel Aviv: Dekel.<br />

Nicolle, David, and Angus McBride. 1982. <strong>The</strong> Armies of Islam, 7th–11th<br />

Centuries. London: Osprey Publishing.<br />

———. 1983. Armies of the Ottoman Turks, 1300–1774. London: Osprey<br />

Publishing.<br />

Poliakoff, Michael B. 1987. Combat Sports in the Ancient <strong>World</strong>:<br />

Competition, Violence and Culture. New Haven: Yale University Press.<br />

Svinth, Joseph R. 2000. “Kronos: A Chronological History of the <strong>Martial</strong><br />

<strong>Arts</strong> and Combative Sports.” http://www.ejmas.com/kronos.<br />

Mongolia<br />

“<strong>The</strong> three manly games” of Mongolia are horse racing, archery, and<br />

wrestling. It is important to understand that all three of the heavenly<br />

games, as they are also called, are tied closely to the pastoral nomadic traditions<br />

of the Central Asian steppe. Today, these disciplines are still held in

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