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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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706 Wrestling and Grappling: China<br />

complementary relationship between Chinese wrestling and boxing, which,<br />

in earliest times, were likely barely distinguishable.<br />

During the Spring and Autumn period (770–476 B.C.), exceptional<br />

wrestlers were selected to serve as bodyguards to accompany field commanders<br />

in their chariots. This tradition is vividly portrayed centuries later<br />

in the powerful guardian figures associated with Buddhist art.<br />

In the Record of Rituals (second century B.C.), wrestling, termed jueli<br />

(compare strength), is described, along with archery, as a major element of<br />

military training carried out during the winter months after the harvest.<br />

During the Qin period (221–207 B.C.), wrestling (juedi, the accepted formal<br />

name) was officially designated as the ceremonial military sport.<br />

During the Former Han period (206–208 B.C.), wrestling and boxing<br />

(shoubo [hand striking]) became more clearly distinguishable, the former<br />

more of a sport emphasizing holds and throws, and the latter retaining the<br />

deadlier, no-holds-barred, hand-to-hand combat skills. However, wrestling’s<br />

full evolution as a sport with rules and limits was uneven. <strong>The</strong> official Tang<br />

History (A.D. 618–960) mentions wrestling matches held in the imperial<br />

palace in which heads were smashed, arms broken, and blood flowed freely.<br />

Another trend discernible during the Former Han was the exchange of<br />

martial arts skills between China and the nomadic peoples to the north.<br />

One of Han emperor Wu’s (140–87 B.C.) bodyguards, Jin Ridi, a Xiongnu<br />

(ancestors of the Mongols), used a skill called shuaihu (a neck-lock throw)<br />

to defeat a would-be assassin. A similar term, shuaijiao (leg throw), ultimately<br />

became the modern common name for Chinese wrestling. This was<br />

also likely the period when both Chinese boxing (shoubo) and wrestling<br />

(juedi) were introduced to the Korean peninsula through military colonies<br />

established and maintained as far south as Pyongyang between 108 B.C.<br />

and A.D. 313. <strong>The</strong>se were the terms used for bare-handed Korean military<br />

martial arts throughout the Koryo period (918–1392) and into the following<br />

early Yi period.<br />

Wrestling tournaments were grand occasions for both commoners<br />

and the elite. Folk matches drew crowds from many miles around, while<br />

imperial tournaments were accompanied by much pomp, with rows of military<br />

drummers on either side of the wrestling ring. Tang emperor Zhuang<br />

Zong (924–926) personally challenged his guests and offered prizes if they<br />

could beat him. One individual defeated him and was made governor of a<br />

prefecture.<br />

Some of what we know about wrestling can be found in the Record<br />

of Wrestling (Jueli Ji, ca. 960), the very existence of which is testimony to<br />

the role of wrestling in Chinese popular culture. In addition to the older<br />

terms, juedi and jueli, it lists several later terms, including xiangpu, a colloquial<br />

form for popular folk wrestling (the term first appears between A.D.

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