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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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708 Wrestling and Grappling: China<br />

that these were only men’s skills, however, is somewhat misleading, for<br />

women also practiced them. <strong>The</strong> Travels of Marco Polo describes one instance<br />

where the daughter of King Kaidu (grandson of Ogodai) agreed to<br />

marry any man who could best her in wrestling. But, much to the dismay<br />

of her family and other well-wishers, she took her skill seriously, defeated<br />

all hopefuls, and remained single. <strong>The</strong> Mongols prohibited Han Chinese<br />

martial arts practices, which by this time consisted mainly of boxing and<br />

weapons routines.<br />

Like the Mongols, the Manchus, who ruled China between 1644 and<br />

1911, stressed riding, archery, and wrestling. <strong>The</strong>y too attempted to place<br />

restrictions on Han Chinese martial arts practices, which they associated<br />

with subversive activities. Emperor Kangxi (1662–1722) is said to have established<br />

an elite Expert Wrestlers Banner (Shanpu Ying) to reward the<br />

strongmen/bodyguards he used to keep palace intrigues in check. Manchu<br />

emperors actively encouraged wrestling, called buku, among their own<br />

people and used it as a political and diplomatic tool in their relations with<br />

the Mongols. <strong>The</strong> Tibetans were also fond of wrestling, and this activity is<br />

depicted in a wall mural in the Potala Palace.<br />

<strong>The</strong> main objective of Chinese wrestling, regardless of local variations<br />

of style (such as Beijing, Baoding, Tianjin, or Mongolian), is to throw the<br />

opponent to the ground by a combination of seizing, and arm maneuvers<br />

(twists and turns) and leg maneuvers (sweeps and hooks). A rough-andtumble<br />

folk sport, it was practiced under Spartan conditions, without mats,<br />

and wrestlers practiced rolling in a fetal position to lessen the impact from<br />

hitting the ground.<br />

In the turmoil following in the wake of the Communist rise to power<br />

in China and finally the split between the People’s Republic of China and<br />

Taiwan in 1949, a number of Chinese wrestling masters immigrated to Taiwan.<br />

Among them was shuaijiao (or, as it is more commonly spelled in the<br />

West, shuai-chiao) champion Chang Tung-sheng. Chang and his students<br />

were instrumental in popularizing the system outside of Asia.<br />

Chinese wrestling was popularized in the twentieth century as sport<br />

shuaijiao. <strong>The</strong> modern form is a type of jacketed wrestling, although practitioners<br />

assert that throwing in shuaijiao does not depend on grabbing the<br />

opponent’s jacket or clothing. <strong>The</strong> priority is to grab the muscle and bone<br />

through the clothing in order to control and throw down the opponent.<br />

However, the use of the competitor’s heavy quilted, short-sleeved jacket,<br />

which wraps tightly around the torso and is tied with a canvas belt, adds<br />

variety to the techniques used in controlling and throwing the opponent.<br />

Fast footwork using sweeps, inner hooks, and kicks to the opponent’s legs<br />

are combined with the use of the arms to control and strike in order to create<br />

a two-directional action, making a powerful throw.

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