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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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714 Wrestling and Grappling: Europe<br />

forms in Western cultures. When the Olympic Games were initiated,<br />

wrestling was one of the original events, as was boxing. When pankration<br />

was added in 776 B.C., all three Greek unarmed combat systems were in<br />

place as Olympic events.<br />

<strong>The</strong> goal of Greek wrestling was simple: Combatants were to force<br />

their opponents to submit without the use of striking. As a result, all holds<br />

and throws were permissible, with the exception of arm and leg locks and<br />

choke holds. Although the participants began from a standing position, it<br />

is likely that many of the events were concluded on the ground after a<br />

throw or a trip was used to force one of the competitors to the ground.<br />

When thrown, a competitor was lifted from a standing position and<br />

thrown to the ground. Examples include throwing an opponent over the<br />

shoulders or hips, with the shoulder or hip acting as a fulcrum, or facing<br />

an opponent and using the leg strength to lift and deposit the victim on the<br />

ground. Since the stadiums in which the wrestling matches were held had<br />

dirt floors, a powerful throw could momentarily stun.<br />

Following the throw, trip, or takedown, a Greek wrestler attempted to<br />

maneuver the opponent into a submission hold. <strong>The</strong> purpose of the hold<br />

was to immobilize the opponent and place him in a danger position, such<br />

as when his shoulders touched the ground. This placed Greek wrestling at<br />

odds with pankration, in which any holds were allowed, including those<br />

that might dismember joints or choke an opponent into unconsciousness.<br />

Besides being included in the Olympics, wrestling was practiced at all athletic<br />

festivals, including those that were local, strictly intracity competitions.<br />

It was also mandatory for Greeks preparing for armed combat to<br />

study the rudiments of wrestling, boxing, or the pankration. Olympic<br />

Games, which honored the Greek deities, were ostensibly a religious form<br />

of expression. <strong>The</strong> sportive and military applications, however, were obvious.<br />

Wrestling, therefore, addressed three different spheres of life in the<br />

Greek world: religion, sport, and military training.<br />

Despite the overall love of wrestling by Greek civilization, this martial<br />

art was not universally appreciated. Plato, in <strong>The</strong> Republic, stated that<br />

wrestlers were of dubious health and could fall seriously ill whenever they<br />

departed from their diet. In addition, several commentators expressed frustration<br />

at the many wrestling contests, including Olympic events, that<br />

were, as they believed, fixed. Still, the modern sport of wrestling in the<br />

Western world owes its roots to the practices of the ancient Greeks, beginning<br />

three thousand years ago.<br />

When the Romans conquered the Greeks, in approximately 146 B.C.,<br />

they found in the Greek world much that they admired and copied. Although<br />

they were impressed by Greek athletic preparation and by events<br />

such as wrestling, the art of wrestling as a sport never became popular in

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