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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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350 Muay Thai<br />

Sinor, Denis. 1990. <strong>The</strong> Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia. Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge University Press.<br />

Smith, John. 1984. “Mongol Campaign Rations: Milk, Marmots, and<br />

Blood?” Journal of Turkish Studies 8: 223–229.<br />

Vernam, Glen. 1972. Man on Horseback. New York: Harper and Row.<br />

Muay Thai<br />

Muay Thai (Thai Boxing) is a style of kickboxing that comes from Thailand<br />

(land of the free), formerly known as Siam. Thai Boxing is one of several<br />

Siamese (Thai) martial arts, such as Krabi-krabong, Lerdrit, Chuparsp,<br />

Thaiplum, Kemier, and Thaiyuth. Krabi-krabong is sword and staff fighting<br />

using prearranged sets. Lerdrit (pronounced lerd-lit) is an empty-hand<br />

battlefield art. Chuparsp (weaponry) includes the pike, knife, stick, sword,<br />

shield, and flexible weapons. Thaiplum (grappling) emphasizes pressure<br />

point and blood vessel strikes. Kemier is a ninjutsu-like stealth and survival<br />

art taught only to head monks at temples. Thaiyuth (“Thai skills”) includes<br />

Muay Thai, Krabi-krabong, and close-quarter combat techniques. Known<br />

as “the science of eight weapons,” Muay Thai is a striking art for ring<br />

fighting that uses the fists, elbows, knees, and feet.<br />

Muay Thai has developed over several centuries in Southeast Asia.<br />

Precise information on the origin of Muay Thai remains unavailable, partly<br />

because the Burmese purportedly burned all Siamese records in A.D. 1767.<br />

According to one story, in A.D. 1560 the Siamese “black” prince Naresuen<br />

fought the Burmese crown prince and defeated him in single combat with<br />

Muay Thai. This martial display persuaded Burmese king Bayinnaung not<br />

to attack Thailand. Others trace the origins of Muay Thai to a contest held<br />

in 1774. In the Burmese city of Rangoon (after the ancient Thai capital of<br />

Ayuthya fell in 1767), Lord Mangra the Burmese king called for a sevenday<br />

Buddhist festival. A Thai Boxer named Nai Khanom Tom defeated<br />

more than nine Burmese fighters one after another before Lord Mangra,<br />

thereby earning his admiration.<br />

In modern Thailand, matches are held every day in Bangkok at the<br />

Lumphini Stadium and the Ratchadamnoen Stadium. Fights last five<br />

rounds of three minutes each with two-minute rest periods in between.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a center referee who issues a ten count for knockdowns. Three<br />

knockdowns in a single round can end the match. Two judges score the<br />

fight on points, unless there is a knockout or the referee stops the contest,<br />

in which case the match ends.<br />

Fighters enter the ring wearing robes. Trainers wear vests. In bouts,<br />

the fighters wear trunks, hand wraps, gloves, mouthpieces, and groin protectors.<br />

Elastic and cotton anklets are optional equipment. In contemporary<br />

bouts, the international boxing gloves that are used for European box-

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