24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

style. One should note that at this time the differences between boxing,<br />

wrestling, and savate were less defined than today, and many fighters competed<br />

in all three. Charles Lecour’s fight with the boxer Owen Swift of England<br />

ended in a draw, with Swift’s legs wrecked and Lecour’s face battered.<br />

Lecour then spent two years with Swift in England learning and<br />

adapting the punches of English boxing to savate. From this, the sport of<br />

Boxe Française, the first sporting form of kickboxing, began in 1832.<br />

Charles Lecour also challenged a maitre of chausson, Joseph Vingtras, over<br />

his comments that savate lacked malice. Chausson was still practiced as a<br />

separate art at the time. <strong>The</strong> bout was well attended. Vingtras’s loss to<br />

Lecour led to the absorption of chausson’s techniques into savate.<br />

Due to the popularity of savate, the police in Paris requested and obtained<br />

a new law that sentenced anyone caught fighting with hands or feet<br />

in the street to immediate long-term enlistment in the army. <strong>The</strong> savateurs’<br />

response led to the development of Lutte Parisienne (Parisian Wrestling), a<br />

form of grappling that hides its techniques as much as possible. Hubert Le-<br />

Broucher and Louis Vigneron were the savateurs most responsible for codifying<br />

these techniques. Vigneron techniques emphasized powerful projection<br />

throws and pinning techniques, while LeBroucher emphasized choking<br />

and neck-breaking techniques. At the same time, the savateurs in the police<br />

force began actively developing Panache (literally, plume; used to mean<br />

swagger, flourish), the use of clothing and other everyday objects to gain a<br />

quick advantage in a fight.<br />

By the late 1870s, savate had become very popular in France. During<br />

this time Joseph Charlemont, a former legionnaire exiled to Belgium for<br />

some indiscretions, systematized the teaching of Boxe Française, la Canne et<br />

Baton (cane and walking stick), and Lutte Parisienne into grades. He also<br />

Two champions of<br />

savate (French boxing),<br />

J. Charlemont<br />

and V. Castérès<br />

(front row, third and<br />

fourth from left).<br />

(Courtesy of Joe<br />

Svinth)<br />

Savate 521

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!