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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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674 Women in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong><br />

boxing match, their faces entirely covered with blood, bosoms bare, and<br />

the clothes nearly torn from them.” <strong>The</strong>se “she-devils” were singers and<br />

prostitutes, and their prefight preparation consisted mostly of drinking<br />

more gin than usual. Other rough venues included the Dog and Duck in St.<br />

George’s Fields, Bagnigge Wells on King’s Cross Road, and White Conduit<br />

House near Islington (Quennell 1962, 63–66).<br />

1774 During Wang Lun’s rebellion in Shandong province, a tall,<br />

white-haired female rebel is seen astride a horse, wielding one sword with<br />

ease and two with care. <strong>The</strong> woman, whose name is unknown, was a sorceress<br />

who claimed to be in touch with the White Lotus deity known as the<br />

Eternal Mother. An actress named Wu San Niang (“Third Daughter Wu”)<br />

was also involved in Wang Lun’s rebellion. Described as a better boxer,<br />

tightrope walker, and acrobat than her late husband, Wu has skill remarked<br />

mainly because female boxers were unusual in a society whose<br />

standards of beauty required women to bind their feet.<br />

1776 According to tradition, a Buddhist nun named Wu Mei (Ng<br />

Mui) creates a Southern Shaolin Boxing style known as yongchun (wing<br />

chun; beautiful springtime). <strong>The</strong> tradition has never been proven, and<br />

twentieth-century stylistic leaders such as Yip Chun believe that a Cantonese<br />

actor named Ng Cheung created the style during the 1730s. If Yip<br />

is correct, then the female attribution could mean that Ng Cheung specialized<br />

in playing female roles, or that the ultimate master is a loving old<br />

woman rather than some muscled Adonis. Still, it is possible that some<br />

southern Chinese women practiced boxing in a group setting. During the<br />

late eighteenth century, Cantonese merchants began hiring Hakka women<br />

to work in their silkworm factories. (While ethnically Chinese, the Hakka<br />

had separate dialects and customs. Unlike most Chinese, these customs did<br />

not include binding the feet of girls. <strong>The</strong>refore their women were physically<br />

capable of working outside the home.) To protect themselves from kidnappers<br />

(marriage by rape remained a feature of Chinese life into the 1980s),<br />

these factory women gradually organized themselves into lay sisterhoods.<br />

So it seems likely that Wu Mei was simply a labor organizer or head of an<br />

orphanage whose name became associated with a boxing style.<br />

1782 A 22-year-old Massachusetts woman named Deborah Sampson<br />

cuts her hair and enlists in the Continental Army, calling herself Robert<br />

Shurtliff. She fought against the Tories and British in New York, and she<br />

also wrote letters for illiterate soldiers and did her best to avoid rough soldiers’<br />

games such as wrestling. (<strong>The</strong> one time she did wrestle, she was flung<br />

to the ground.) After the war, Sampson married, and in 1838 her husband<br />

became the first man to receive a pension from the United States government<br />

for his wife’s military service. Sampson’s maritime equivalents during<br />

the Revolutionary War included Fanny Campbell and Mary Anne Talbot.

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