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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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About 460 B.C. <strong>The</strong> Hellenic historian Herodotus describes the practices and<br />

culture of some female warriors he calls the Amazons. Who the<br />

Amazons were is not known, and in fact there were female<br />

warriors and priestesses throughout the Mediterranean world.<br />

About 445 B.C. Hellenic philosophers describe the four “roots” of the universe<br />

as being Fire, Air, Earth, and Water. <strong>The</strong>se elements in turn had<br />

basic characteristics, namely hot, cold, dry, and wet.<br />

About 398 B.C. Engineers working for the Syracusan tyrant Dionysius the Elder<br />

invent what the Greeks called katapeltes (hurlers) and the Romans<br />

called ballistae (throwers). Smaller versions of these<br />

weapons subsequently became crossbows. <strong>The</strong> Chinese meanwhile<br />

were developing trebuchets, which were enormous slings<br />

attached to pivoting wooden beams.<br />

388 B.C. During one of the first fixed fights on record, a boxer named<br />

Eupolos the <strong>The</strong>ssalian pays the fighters Agetor of Arkadia,<br />

Prytanis of Kyziokos, and Phormion of Halikarnassos to lose to<br />

him during the Olympics.<br />

About 350 B.C. According to a story by Zhuang Zi, Chinese kings enjoy watching<br />

sword fights, sometimes to the exclusion of affairs of state.<br />

About 330 B.C. Etruscan bronze statuettes show men wrestling with women.<br />

About 322 B.C. According to Greek sources, a north Indian king named Chandragupta<br />

kept an armed female bodyguard.<br />

About 290 B.C. While commenting on the Yijing (I Ching; Book of Changes),<br />

the Chinese scholar Zhuang Zi introduces the convention of<br />

describing “yin” and “yang” as “bright” and “dark” instead of<br />

“weak” and “strong.”<br />

About 270 B.C. Chinese scholars describe matter in terms of the Five Configurations<br />

(wu xing). <strong>The</strong>se elements included wood, fire, earth,<br />

metal, and water, and may show Hellenistic influence via India.<br />

<strong>The</strong> appearance of this cosmology in Sun Zi is part of the reason<br />

that many non-Chinese scholars think that Sun Bin actually<br />

wrote (or at least extensively revised) the text.<br />

About 246 B.C. As part of a memorial for a deceased patrician named Junius<br />

Brutus Pera, three pairs of slaves are made to fence with one<br />

another in the Roman cattle market. <strong>The</strong> spectacle makes this<br />

funeral famous, and gladiators are the ultimate result.<br />

216 B.C. King Ptolemy IV of Egypt sends his best pankrationist, a man<br />

named Aristonikos, to the Olympic Games; his goal is to show<br />

Egypt’s superiority over Greece. However, to the Greeks’ satisfaction,<br />

the <strong>The</strong>ban pankrationist Kleitomachos ultimately prevailed.<br />

And how did he do this? Not by outfighting the Egyptian,<br />

but by appealing to the patriotism of the ethnically Greek<br />

officials and crowd. This is a reminder that neither the use of<br />

athletics for political purposes nor biased officiating is anything<br />

new.<br />

Second century <strong>The</strong> Chinese historian Si Ma Qian describes xia, a word that<br />

B.C. can be translated as “knights who wore coarse clothes” or<br />

“knights from humble alleys.” In general, these heroes were<br />

noted for their altruism, courage, and sense of justice (with the<br />

emphasis being on correcting individual rather than social injustices).<br />

<strong>The</strong>y were notorious for associating with butchers and<br />

gamblers, drinking in public, and ignoring normal social cour-<br />

790 Chronological History of the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>

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