24.03.2013 Views

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

1858 On October 13, an Austin, Texas, newspaper called the Southern<br />

Intelligencer reports that “it is a common thing here to<br />

see boys from 10 to 14 years of age carrying about their persons<br />

Bowie knives and pistols” (Hollon 1974, 54). <strong>The</strong> model<br />

for the statement was probably Ben Thompson, a 16-year-old<br />

typesetter for the newspaper who fancied himself quite the<br />

thug. In Thompson’s case, the weapons were somewhat ornamental:<br />

Although Thompson once fired a shotgun from ambush<br />

at a black youth, he did not actually kill anyone until<br />

1865. Texas gunslingers were much more likely to shoot unarmed<br />

blacks and Mexicans than armed anything. John Wesley<br />

Hardin, for instance, was 15 when he shot and killed a black<br />

man for shaking a stick at him. William Preston Longley was<br />

similarly 15 when he shot and killed two black men for dancing<br />

in the street. <strong>The</strong>se youthful Texas gunmen somehow always<br />

managed to avoid meeting equally notorious black or<br />

Mexican gunslingers. <strong>The</strong> most notorious black gunslinger was<br />

probably Jim Kelly, a rider with the Print Olive outfit in Kansas<br />

and Nebraska during the 1870s. <strong>The</strong> Olive outfit was truly<br />

mean, and known for shooting, hanging, and then burning<br />

rustlers it found on its range.<br />

1858 As part of their post–Crimean War reforms, the British introduce<br />

Swiss calisthenics into their recruit training programs.<br />

1859 New York State bans prizefights, and places severe restrictions<br />

on sparring matches. <strong>The</strong> goal was to stop working-class men<br />

from traveling around the state watching prizefights.<br />

1859 A Greek grain merchant named Evangelios Zappas convinces<br />

King Otto of Greece to host an Olympic festival at Athens in<br />

order to inspire Greek patriotism and promote international<br />

trade. Besides running and jumping, the events held at this festival<br />

include both standing and ground wrestling.<br />

1861 Under the influence of the physical culture movement, Amherst<br />

becomes the first United States college to have a physical education<br />

department.<br />

1861 Feng Guifen introduces zi qiang (self-strengthening) into the<br />

Chinese political lexicon. Although the phrase originally meant<br />

using European arms and manufacturing methods to defend<br />

traditional Chinese values, by 1935 it also meant using foreign<br />

calisthenics to strengthen Chinese bodies and spirits for military<br />

service.<br />

1862 With the help of Henry Fugner, Dr. Miroslav Tyrs creates the<br />

Sokol (Falcon) system of national gymnastics in Bohemia. This<br />

system offered women a greater part than did German gymnastics,<br />

and also supported Czech nationalism better than Prussian<br />

Turnverein. Sokol methods influenced czarist Russian sport<br />

during the 1890s and Soviet sport after 1918.<br />

1864 In volume 1 of a text called Principles of Biology, the English<br />

philosopher Herbert Spencer coins the phrase “survival of the<br />

fittest.” Spencer sees nature as a state of pitiless warfare, with<br />

the elimination of the weak and unfit as its goal. People who<br />

did not read him closely soon applied this theory to social dynamics,<br />

and called the result Social Darwinism.<br />

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

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!