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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Side kick delivered by Miss Kim, ca. 1950. (Courtesy of Joe Svinth)<br />

these three kingdoms. Silla, despite being the smallest of the three, was<br />

eventually able to unify the entire peninsula by 800. Tradition attributes<br />

part of the success of the Silla kingdom to the practice of martial arts by a<br />

specific branch of the military known as the hwarang, which can be defined<br />

as the “flowering of manhood.” Hwarang soldiers were expected to be<br />

proficient in all areas of the martial arts, both armed and unarmed, as well<br />

as to demonstrate loyalty to the ruler and uphold the Confucian values of<br />

a civilized society. Tradition has compared the hwarang to the samurai of<br />

Japan and the knight from the medieval period of Western European history,<br />

both of whom were expected to follow warrior codes of behavior. <strong>The</strong><br />

collective martial arts of the hwarang were known as hwarang-dô (the way<br />

of the flowering of manhood).<br />

<strong>The</strong> country fell into disunity again in 900, but was later unified under<br />

the Koryo dynasty and became known as Koryo by the beginning of the millennium.<br />

From the time of the unification of the nation until about 1400,<br />

the Korean martial arts entered into a period of expansion, experimentation,<br />

and development. Oral tradition maintains that hwarang-dô continued<br />

to be practiced and expanded by the hwarang warriors. <strong>The</strong> martial arts of<br />

t’aek’kyŏn, primarily a kick-oriented martial art, and subak, a fist-oriented<br />

Taekwondo 609

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