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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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1570 By doing single backward aerial somersaults, an Italian mountebank<br />

named Arcangelo Tuccaro becomes modern Europe’s<br />

first famous trapeze artist. Due to problems with ropes and<br />

springboards, double back flips were usually fatal until the<br />

1890s, while triple back flips were equally hazardous until the<br />

1920s. <strong>The</strong>se statistics about world-class gymnasts are worth<br />

recalling whenever one encounters tales about the exploits of<br />

legendary heroes.<br />

1571 To increase his power, prestige, and wealth, the Japanese lord<br />

Oda Nobunaga orders the destruction of the Buddhist temples<br />

on Mount Hiei. (When King Henry VIII of England dissolved<br />

all Catholic monasteries in Britain between 1535 and 1540, he<br />

almost tripled his private income. Although these two men<br />

didn’t know each other, doubtless they had similar hopes and<br />

expectations.) As Nobunaga’s persecution caused the surviving<br />

monks to begin living in towns instead of monasteries, the<br />

destruction was partially responsible for spreading Buddhist<br />

martial arts into the Japanese cities.<br />

About 1578 To secure the support of the Tibetan theocracy for his son Yonten<br />

Gyatso, the Golden Horde’s Altan Khan orders that people<br />

start referring to the young man as the Dalai Lama Vajradhara.<br />

<strong>The</strong> phrase means “the teacher whose wisdom is as great as the<br />

ocean.”<br />

1578 Lord Oda Nobunaga hosts Japan’s first major sumô tournament.<br />

Although referees and heroic ring names, or shikona,<br />

also date to the 1570s, the straw-and-earthen ring, or dohyo,<br />

only dates to the 1670s.<br />

1579 Lai Qidai becomes the first Chinese philosopher known to have<br />

illustrated his explanations of the Dao (Tao) using a circle of<br />

interlocking black and white fish. Lai’s goal was to emphasize<br />

the Dao’s central nature, yin and yang, rather than its outward<br />

nature, seen in the sixty-four trigrams of the Yijing (I Ching;<br />

<strong>The</strong> Book of Changes).<br />

About 1588 In a stage play called <strong>The</strong> Wounds of Civil War, the Elizabethan<br />

playwright Thomas Lodge becomes the first English<br />

playwright known to have included lusty rapier work in a secular<br />

entertainment.<br />

1588 To ensure the safety of his tax collectors, the self-made generalissimo<br />

Toyotomi Hideyoshi prohibits Japanese farmers from<br />

owning weapons of any kind, which in turn forces peasants to<br />

choose between being samurai or farmers. Nevertheless,<br />

firearms, swords, and other weapons remained easily obtainable<br />

throughout the Tokugawa era, and as late as 1840, perhaps<br />

80 percent of the participants in Saitama Prefecture fencing<br />

contests were commoners.<br />

1592 A massive Japanese invasion causes a desperate Korean<br />

government to create a Hullyon Togam (General Directorate<br />

for Military Training). Its purpose was to teach peasants to<br />

be musketeers, archers, or pikemen. Its pedagogy came from<br />

the 1562 Chinese military treatise called New Text of<br />

Practical Tactics (described under that year). An unintentional<br />

result was the publication of some of the first detailed de-<br />

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

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