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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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542 Southeast Asia<br />

stances than any known arts of India. While it is clear from the historical<br />

record that Chinese contact began as early as the state of Funan, the early<br />

history is murky enough to render the Chinese images a continuing mystery.<br />

Contemporary martial arts in Cambodia remain uninvestigated. <strong>The</strong><br />

logical assumption is that, given the flow of peoples throughout the area<br />

and Cambodia’s strong associations with Thailand and Vietnam, nations<br />

whose martial roots (primarily Chinese) and traditions are more well<br />

known, Cambodia shares a common heritage.<br />

Similar points can be made about Laos, whose founders trace their<br />

origins to the migrations, beginning in about the eighth century A.D., from<br />

the Thai kingdom of Nanchao in southwestern China. Kublai Khan’s incursions<br />

in the thirteenth century prompted mass migration of the Lao into<br />

the area of the modern state of Laos. Despite the absence of research, it is<br />

possible to speculate that indigenous martial systems based in Chinese<br />

wushu and Thai arts survived into modern times.<br />

Indonesia<br />

Silat is the primary martial art of Indonesia. <strong>The</strong> system is based on indigenous<br />

Indonesian combat arts with primary influence from India and<br />

China. Silat employs striking with both hands and feet, throws, and locks.<br />

A variety of weapons regarded as specifically Indonesian and Malayan<br />

(e.g., the kris—a double-edged stabbing dagger) are integrated with unarmed<br />

techniques in silat curricula.<br />

Most sources contend that silat originated on the Indonesian island of<br />

Sumatra during the period of the Menangkabu kingdom. It then developed<br />

and proliferated from the seventh through the sixteenth centuries, becoming<br />

a network of systematized arts by at least the fourteenth century. Ultimately,<br />

silat is an amalgam of indigenous Indonesian martial traditions and<br />

imported traditions from India, China, and the Middle East. <strong>The</strong> earliest<br />

non-Indonesian influences are likely to have been introduced in the area of<br />

the Sumatran seaport of Palembang during the period of the Srivijaya Empire<br />

(seventh to twelfth centuries A.D.) by Indians and Chinese who landed<br />

at the seaport. Until relatively late in the twentieth century, the styles of<br />

silat were extremely localized, with each village or teacher having a distinct<br />

style within the general pattern.<br />

Within the variety of styles, however, there are elements in common<br />

among Indonesian silat and its derivatives of Filipino silat and Malaysian<br />

bersilat. In general, silat is characterized by the following. While all systems<br />

are based on the use of weapons, training begins with instruction in emptyhand<br />

tactics and progresses to armed techniques. Until the latter part of the<br />

twentieth century, silat remained strictly combative, avoiding the compromises<br />

needed to make the transition to sport. Outside self-defense situa-

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