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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Mass, Jeffrey P. 1989. Lordship and Inheritance in Early Medieval Japan: A<br />

Study of the Kamakura Sôryô System. Stanford, CA: Stanford University<br />

Press.<br />

———. 1997. <strong>The</strong> Origins of Japan’s Medieval <strong>World</strong>: Courtiers, Clerics,<br />

Warriors and Peasants in the Fourteenth Century. Stanford, CA: Stanford<br />

University Press.<br />

Mass, Jeffrey P., and William B. Hauser. 1985. <strong>The</strong> Bakufu in Japanese<br />

History. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.<br />

Totman, Conrad. Early Modern Japan. 1993. Berkeley: University of<br />

California Press.<br />

Savate<br />

Savate (from the French for “shoe”) is an indigenous martial art of France<br />

and southwestern Europe that developed from the fighting techniques of<br />

sailors, thugs, and soldiers. Although it has a reputation for being a kicking<br />

style, savate also includes hand strikes and grappling, as well as<br />

weapons. Two separate sports have derived from savate, the first a form of<br />

sport kickboxing called Boxe Française, the second a form of fencing with<br />

sticks called la canne de combat. Two related arts, called chausson (French;<br />

deck shoe) and zipota (Basque; boot), also existed but today are considered<br />

part of the style of savate called “Savate Danse de Rue.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> use of kicking techniques in Western martial arts like boxing and<br />

wrestling probably started with the Greeks and Romans in the art known<br />

as pankration. <strong>The</strong> early history is often vague, but sword manuscripts<br />

from the 1400s, such as Talhoffer Fechtbuch, also included sections on<br />

wrestling that included kicking and striking techniques along with grappling.<br />

Several of these manuals were recently collected together in a German<br />

book on wrestling that shows what appears to be the continuation of<br />

savate-like techniques from 1447 to 1700. <strong>The</strong> earliest references to savate<br />

itself come from literature and folklore: In the 1700s a poem describes a savateur<br />

(practitioner of savate) as part angel and part devil. In Basque folklore,<br />

the heroic half-bear, half-man Basso Juan uses zipota, the Basque form<br />

of savate, in his fights. In the mid-1700s, the term chausson, from the type<br />

of shoe worn on board ship, was being used to describe the fighting techniques<br />

of French, Spanish, and Portuguese sailors. As time passed, the more<br />

northern style of foot fighting was called savate while the southern style<br />

was called chausson. Chausson was more a form of play or sport, while savate<br />

was more combative.<br />

In 1803, Michel “Pisseux” Casseux opened the first salle (training<br />

hall) of savate in Paris. He had codified the techniques of savate into fifteen<br />

kicking techniques and fifteen cane techniques. About the same time, Emile<br />

Lamand began teaching savate in Madrid. Lamand adopted the local style<br />

of knife fighting (called either navaja, for a type of knife, or saca tripas [gut<br />

Savate 519

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