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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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priestesses throughout the Mediterranean<br />

world. Also, stories about Amazon<br />

mastectomies are likely owed to<br />

Hellenistic stage tradition rather than<br />

actual practice: Hellenistic actors traditionally<br />

bared their right breasts to<br />

show that they were playing unmarried<br />

females.<br />

396 B.C. A Spartan princess named<br />

Kyniska becomes the first woman to<br />

win the chariot-racing events at Olympia.<br />

While Plutarch wrote that Kyniska<br />

personally drove the winning chariot,<br />

most other ancient sources suggest that<br />

she was the owner of those horses<br />

rather than their driver.<br />

About 330 B.C. Etruscan bronze<br />

statuettes show men wrestling with<br />

women. While the men were naked, the<br />

women wore thigh-length, pleated tunics.<br />

Accordingly, the art was probably<br />

allegorical rather than erotic.<br />

About 322 B.C. Greek writers describe the female bodyguard of a<br />

north Indian prince named Chandragupta.<br />

First century A.D. A Chinese annalist named Zhao Yi writes about a<br />

woman who was a great swordsman. She said the key to success was constant<br />

practice without the supervision of a master; after a while, she said,<br />

she just understood everything there was to know. But as immediately after<br />

saying this she accepted the job as swordsmanship instructor for the<br />

Kingdom of Yue, perhaps this description is lacking some verisimilitude.<br />

After all, if one needed no teacher save oneself to become a sword master,<br />

there seems no reason why she herself would become one.<br />

18–27 A peasant rebellion rocks Shandong province and leads to the<br />

collapse of the Xin dynasty and the creation of the Later Han dynasty. This<br />

unrest (called the Red Eyebrow Rebellion after its members’ practice of<br />

painting their eyebrows blood red) was led by a woman who claimed to<br />

speak with the voice of the local gods. Strictly speaking, this was a case of<br />

spirit-possession rather than shamanism.<br />

About 41 Later Han soldiers under the command of the Shensi aristocrat<br />

Ma Yuan kill a Vietnamese feudal lord living near Tonkin and publicly<br />

rape his wife and sister-in-law. <strong>The</strong>se rapes may have been official acts,<br />

as, from the Han perspective, they would have demonstrated the superior-<br />

Engraving of the<br />

French national<br />

heroine Joan of Arc<br />

holding a sword.<br />

(Bettmann/ Corbis)<br />

Women in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 665

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