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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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and to the point.” Pugnus derives from the Greek pugme, meaning “fist.”<br />

Though boxing is mentioned in the ancient Hindu epic the Mahabharata,<br />

the origins of the art traditionally have been traced to ancient Greece. Both<br />

Homer and Virgil poeticize the art in their epics, and designs on ancient<br />

Greek pottery feature boxers in action. In Greek mythology, the divine<br />

boxer Pollux (also called Polydeuces), twin of Castor (with whom he<br />

presided over public games such as the Olympics), was said to have sparred<br />

with Hercules.<br />

Ancient Greek and Roman pugilists developed the art of using the fists<br />

to pummel their opponents while wearing leather thongs and binders,<br />

known as himantes and sphairai, wrapped around the hands and wrists.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Greeks also used the amphotidus, a protective helmet; Egyptian boxers<br />

are depicted wearing similar headgear. Originally used to protect the<br />

wrists and fragile bones in the hands, the leather thongs (also known as<br />

cesti) were twisted so as to inflict greater injury. By the fourth century B.C.,<br />

the thongs were replaced with hardened leather gloves. <strong>The</strong> first famous<br />

Greek boxer, <strong>The</strong>agenes of Thaos, champion of the 450 B.C. Olympics, is<br />

said to have won 1,406 battles with the cesti, killing most of his opponents.<br />

In Roman times, the cestus was studded with metal, and the art was reduced<br />

to a gladiatorial spectacle.<br />

<strong>The</strong> art of boxing in combat disappeared with the advent of heavy armor.<br />

Upon the introduction of the firearm—and the resulting obsolescence<br />

of armor—the “noble science of self-defense” was reborn. James Figg, an<br />

eighteenth-century British cudgel-fighter, swordsman, and the first modern<br />

boxing champion, was the central figure in this renaissance. When he<br />

opened his boxing school in London in 1719, the art of boxing had been<br />

dormant for over a thousand years—since the fall of the Roman Empire.<br />

Figg taught young aristocrats the art of self-defense by applying the precepts<br />

of modern fencing—footwork, speed, and the straight lunge—to<br />

fisticuffs. Thus, Western fistfighters learned to throw straight punches, the<br />

basis of modern boxing, from fencers. To some extent boxing replaced the<br />

duel, allowing men of all social classes to defend themselves and their<br />

honor without severely maiming or killing each other.<br />

Despite this connection with fencing, boxing encounters during this<br />

early modern era were largely unstructured and highly uncivilized. Boxers<br />

fought bare-knuckle (without gloves), and wrestling, choking, throwing,<br />

gouging, and purring (stomping on one’s opponent with spiked boots) were<br />

commonplace. <strong>The</strong> art began to be refined when Figg’s successor, Jack<br />

Broughton (the “Father of Boxing”), drafted the first set of rules in 1741<br />

after killing an opponent in the ring. According to “Broughton’s Rules,” a<br />

square was established in the center of the fighting ring (a circular border<br />

of spectators) to which fighters were to return after a knockdown, which<br />

Boxing, European 45

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