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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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630 Thaing<br />

the beginning of the twentieth century among the Wa and well into the<br />

mid-twentieth century among the Kachin.) Others were Buddhist, and so<br />

there were prohibitions against unnecessary killing.<br />

Accordingly, the development of thaing needs to be viewed in the context<br />

of movements of ethnic groups such as the Shan, Mon, Karen,<br />

Arakanai, and Kachin through the mountainous area where Tibet, Yunnan,<br />

Burma, and India meet. <strong>The</strong> Kachins, for example, have a well-developed<br />

oral tradition of migration from their ancestral home, the Majoi Shingra<br />

Bum (Naturally Flat Mountain), which was possibly located in eastern Tibet.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Karens also have a tradition that they passed through the mountains<br />

on their way to lower Burma. Meanwhile, in neighboring Manipur,<br />

India, the Meiteis (who comprise 60 percent of the population) are of Tai<br />

origin and famous for their practice of martial arts. While this may owe<br />

more to Hindu than to Tibetan influence, the primary Manipuri art thangta<br />

is closely tied to dance and ritual practice. Likewise, the equally Tai hill<br />

tribes of Nagaland (north of Manipur) have related martial traditions.<br />

Traditions from Yunnan province, which is where the Tai had an empire<br />

into the thirteenth century, also may have links with thaing. For example,<br />

as recently as 1928, Miao doctors were reported as boxing, fighting<br />

with sticks and knives, and practicing qigong (exercises for cultivating internal<br />

strength often associated with martial art training). While much<br />

more research is required into the subject, the historical connections among<br />

martial arts in the area are intriguing.<br />

How these interconnections probably came about is that during the<br />

thirteenth century, Kublai Khan overthrew the Nanchao, or Tai, states in<br />

Yunnan. This caused Tai refugees to retreat into Manipur, Nagaland, and<br />

the Irrawaddy and Menam valleys, and over time they established a number<br />

of states, including one that later became Thailand. Moreover, the<br />

Naga who entered the Kachin state were often assimilated into Jinghpaw<br />

clans. Jinghpaw oral narratives suggest a natural affinity between the two<br />

groups.<br />

Meanwhile, King Narathihapate of Pagan executed a Mongol ambassador<br />

carrying Kublai Khan’s demands to Burma and even had the audacity<br />

to directly attack China. So for the next 150 years Burma and Mongol<br />

China were almost constantly at war, either with one another or with the<br />

various Tai states.<br />

That said, lethwei only entered the oral traditions of this struggle during<br />

the eighteenth century. Specifically, according to Thai tradition, in the<br />

1770s a Thai prisoner of war, Nai Khanom Tom, was awarded his freedom<br />

after he defeated a dozen of his Burmese captors in boxing matches. In contrast,<br />

Burmese tradition maintains that Nai was the consummate politician,<br />

ingratiating himself at the Burmese court to such an extent that he was al-

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