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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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738 Wrestling, Professional<br />

Russian wrestler Ivan Poddubny, claimed the women’s world wrestling<br />

championship.<br />

During this period, contests often emphasized ethnicity and nationalism.<br />

For example, in 1869 a Danish strongman named Frederik Safft defeated<br />

a German named Wilhelm Heygster in Copenhagen. As the Prussians<br />

had defeated Denmark in a war in 1864, the victory made Safft a<br />

Danish hero. Following the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905, jûjutsu<br />

acts became popular in the United States, Europe, and Latin America.<br />

Noted performers included Katsukuma Higashi, Tokugoro Ito, and Taro<br />

Miyake. And during 1909–1910, the Bengali millionaire Sharat Kumar<br />

Mishra sent four Indian wrestlers (the Great Gama, Ahmed Bux, Imam<br />

Bux, and Gulam Mohiuddin) to Europe as part of a scheme to prove that<br />

Europeans could be beaten using Indian methods.<br />

At the turn of the century, popular European champions included<br />

George Hackenschmidt, Paul Pons, and Stanislaus Zbyszko. <strong>The</strong>se men<br />

worked in the music halls of Paris and London, and did turns with partners,<br />

lifted weights, and accepted challenges from the crowd. <strong>The</strong>se challengers<br />

were often shills, because champions had nothing to gain and<br />

everything to lose by wrestling unknowns. Thus the draw was matches that<br />

the crowd believed were real, but in which the results were actually prearranged.<br />

As Hackenschmidt put it in an article published in Health and<br />

Strength on March 20, 1909, “Wrestling is my business . . . [While] I am<br />

certainly very fond of the sporting element which enters into it, [I] should<br />

be absurdly careless if I allowed my tastes in that direction to interfere too<br />

seriously with my career in life.”<br />

In North America, wrestlers worked in saloons, Wild West shows, and<br />

vaudeville. Prominent turn-of-the-century wrestlers included Martin<br />

“Farmer” Burns, Tom Jenkins, and Frank Gotch. This was also the era of<br />

yellow journalism, and so, with the support of jingoistic sportswriters,<br />

there arose a clamor to see whether European or American wrestling was<br />

best. This in turn led to two well-publicized matches between the North<br />

American champion Frank Gotch and the European champion George<br />

Hackenschmidt. Gotch won both times, and so the U.S. newspapers gave<br />

him the title of “Champion of the <strong>World</strong>.”<br />

Following Gotch’s retirement in 1913 (he received more lucrative offers<br />

from a Chicago movie company), wrestling went into decline. Part of<br />

the problem was <strong>World</strong> War I ruining the business in Europe. But scandals<br />

also played a part. For example, in March 1910, John C. Maybray and<br />

about eighty others (including Gotch’s former manager, Joe Carroll) pleaded<br />

guilty in Iowa to charges of using the U.S. mails to fix wrestling matches.<br />

Toward reducing the appearance of corruption, after <strong>World</strong> War I the<br />

National Boxing Association began recognizing “official” wrestling cham-

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