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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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718 Wrestling and Grappling: Europe<br />

age” of American wrestling is the gaudy showmanship and theater of makebelieve<br />

“professional” wrestling, currently touted as “sports entertainment.”<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are attempts to revive the art, however. Today, there is a form<br />

of wrestling known as pancrase in Japan that resembles catch-as-catch-can.<br />

Two official amateur wrestling systems exist today that may be defined<br />

as international styles because they have attempted to impose a rule<br />

structure that is uniform in application and that is intended to allow<br />

wrestlers from all nations to participate: Greco-Roman and freestyle<br />

wrestling. Both types are Olympic events. Freestyle wrestling allows competitors<br />

to grasp any part of the body and use the legs for sweeps and takedowns.<br />

Greco-Roman allows only the upper body to be used; the legs cannot<br />

be employed to sweep the opponent, nor can they be touched for grabs<br />

or takedowns. Both forms of wrestling are similar in that competitors attempt<br />

to pin their opponents by forcing the shoulders to touch the mat.<br />

Freestyle wrestling is practiced worldwide and is the most popular form of<br />

the sport. In North America, high school and college students compete in<br />

freestyle wrestling tournaments with modified rules, such as changes in the<br />

time allowed to pin an opponent. Greco-Roman is most popular in Europe.<br />

Due to the lack of worldwide acceptance of this style, however, there is talk<br />

at the present time of removing this category from Olympic competition.<br />

Wrestling has traditionally been a male pursuit, but with the close of<br />

the twentieth century, female wrestling began to receive greater acceptance.<br />

Jûdô has allowed female competition for a number of decades, and in 1987,<br />

the Soviet Union allowed female sambo competitions. <strong>The</strong>re is still no<br />

worldwide sanctioning body for female Greco-Roman or freestyle wrestlers.<br />

However, with the growing demand for gender equality and the passage of<br />

laws enforcing it in the United States and many European nations, it is likely<br />

that female participation in wrestling will be allowed internationally.<br />

Wrestling is a martial art and sport that transcends national boundaries<br />

and cultural identities. Beyond the general criteria presented at the<br />

beginning of this entry, hundreds of recognized regional variants of<br />

wrestling exist in the world. A small listing includes the following: trente,<br />

from Romania and Moldavia; kokh, the national wrestling system of Armenia;<br />

Georgian jacket-wrestling, which resembles jûdô in many respects;<br />

dumog, one of the better-known wrestling systems from the Philippines;<br />

Schwingen, the national wrestling system of Switzerland; tegumi, a<br />

wrestling system from the island of Okinawa; lutte Parisienne, the French<br />

combat wrestling system that is often associated with the art of savate; and<br />

Corsican wrestling, from the Mediterranean island of Corsica.<br />

At the beginning of the twenty-first century, it is safe to assume that<br />

wrestling will continue to grow in popularity throughout the world. <strong>The</strong><br />

fate of specific cultural forms of wrestling is unknown; perhaps as the

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