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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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1671<br />

cont.<br />

tradition his discussions with three rônin (masterless samurai)<br />

named Fukuno Hichiroemon, Isogai Jirozaemon, and Miura<br />

Yojiemon had significant impact on the development of jûjutsu<br />

and related Japanese martial arts.<br />

1672 A Japanese swordsman called Nakagawa Shoshunjin advertises<br />

himself as a master of ninjutsu, and even offers to teach people<br />

to avoid detection by changing themselves into birds or rats.<br />

Since Nakagawa studiously avoided matching swords with<br />

duelists and only taught children, the truth of his claims is<br />

unknown.<br />

1674 According to an eighteenth-century tradition, five Shaolin<br />

monks skilled “in the art of war and self-defense” establish the<br />

first Chinese Triad, the Hong League, in Fujian province. What<br />

these military skills involved is unknown, as the account of<br />

them has changed over time. In 1925, for instance, they included<br />

praying for rain and making a few magical passes with<br />

a sword, while by 1960, they included superhuman prowess in<br />

Chinese boxing.<br />

About 1676 A Japanese man named Fujibayashi Yasuyoshi publishes ten<br />

hand-bound volumes, known collectively as Bansenshukai (Ten<br />

Thousand Rivers Collect in the Sea), that discussed ninja techniques<br />

and mysteries in some detail.<br />

1681 <strong>The</strong> London Protestant Mercury provides the first known description<br />

of an English bare-knuckled prizefight.<br />

1688 Following a coup in Siam, women drilled in the use of muskets<br />

replace the 600 European mercenaries and Christian samurai<br />

who had served the previous government.<br />

About 1690 Female wrestling acts become common in Japanese red-light<br />

districts. Although Confucianist officials charged that such<br />

acts were harmful to public morals, female wrestling remained<br />

popular in Tokyo until the 1890s and in remote<br />

areas such as southern Kyûshû and the Ryûkyûs until the<br />

1920s.<br />

About 1692 A man named Gong Xiangzhun introduces a form of Chinese<br />

boxing to Okinawa; the Shôrin-ryû kata kusanku commemorates<br />

his instruction.<br />

1707 <strong>The</strong> French opera star Julie La Maupin dies at the age of 37; in<br />

1834 novelist Théophile Gautier made her famous as Mademoiselle<br />

de Maupin. In her time she was a noted fencer and<br />

cross-dresser; her fencing masters included her father, Gaston<br />

d’Aubigny, and a lover, a man named Sérannes.<br />

1715 A Máistir pionnsa (Gaelic; fencing master) named Alexander<br />

Doyle starts teaching Irish fencing in Germany, claiming it develops<br />

obedience to orders, quickness of eye, agility, and physical<br />

fitness in young men thinking of military careers. (Because<br />

British law prohibited Catholic Irish from owning swords, Irish<br />

fencing masters normally trained using singlesticks instead of<br />

swords.)<br />

1716 <strong>The</strong> words of Yamamoto Tsunetomo, a provincial samurai<br />

turned Buddhist monk, are collected, bound, and titled Hagakure<br />

(Hidden Among the Leaves). Although obscure during<br />

its own time, during the 1930s Hagakure became popular with<br />

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

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