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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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610 Taekwondo<br />

martial art, also became popular with the aristocracy and commoners alike.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se two martial systems were to endure into the twentieth century. Despite<br />

repeated invasion attempts and influence by the Chinese, and a successful<br />

invasion by the Mongols, Korea maintained a large degree of independence<br />

and continued to develop its own unique culture.<br />

During this time period also, the traditional history maintains that<br />

Chinese martial arts exerted a major influence on the Korean systems.<br />

Most important for the development of taekwondo, the contacts with<br />

China also included contacts with experts in northern systems of Chinese<br />

boxing. <strong>The</strong>se northern systems were famous for their kicks, many of<br />

which were incorporated into Korean systems. Perhaps the most famous of<br />

these kicks is the so-called flying kick, known today as a jumping side kick.<br />

In 1392, following the expulsion of the Mongols, the final Korean dynasty<br />

was established, the Yi dynasty. <strong>The</strong> Yi rulers began a systematic program<br />

of eliminating martial arts from society, with the result that martial<br />

arts practitioners and the hwarang are alleged to have taken their arts to<br />

remote locations, such as Buddhist monasteries, for continued study and<br />

practice. Korea also entered an isolationist period. So successful were the<br />

results that Korea eventually became known as the “hermit kingdom.” Toward<br />

the end of the nineteenth century a vigorous and expansionistic Japan<br />

made inroads into Korean sovereignty and eventually annexed the nation<br />

outright in 1910.<br />

<strong>The</strong> harsh Japanese occupation lasted until 1945. <strong>The</strong> use of the Korean<br />

language was banned, Korean citizens were forced to take Japanese<br />

names, and Korean institutions of learning were closed. However, this repression<br />

created a backlash of renewed interest among Koreans in traditional<br />

Korean arts, including martial arts, which were often practiced secretly.<br />

However, Koreans also studied Japanese martial arts during this<br />

time period, including karate, jûdô, and kendô.<br />

With the end of the occupation, Koreans began to reassert their sovereignty<br />

and identity, and an understandable resurgence of Korean martial<br />

arts took place. With the division of the peninsula into the Communistdominated<br />

north and the American-supported south in 1948, and the beginning<br />

of the bloody Korean War in 1950, there began an even greater<br />

push for reinstatement and development of Korean martial arts.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Korean martial arts received a massive boost in popularity when<br />

several Korean stylists, including t’aek’kyŏn practitioners, gave a demonstration<br />

of these arts before South Korean president Syngman Rhee in<br />

1952, during the height of the Korean conflict. So impressed was Rhee with<br />

the demonstration, he immediately ordered all Korean troops to be trained<br />

in these arts. <strong>The</strong>re also began a push for the unification of these fighting<br />

arts.

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