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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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1881 <strong>The</strong> Japanese army replaces neo-Confucian bushidô with<br />

tokuho, a Prussian-inspired “Soldiers’ Code.” (Although<br />

trained by the French, the Japanese liked imperial German and<br />

Austrian political philosophy.) After making some additional<br />

changes that emphasized the primacy of the emperor, the Soldiers’<br />

Code was renamed bushidô (the way of the warrior) in<br />

1909. <strong>The</strong> brutal excesses of the Greater East Asian War, as<br />

the Japanese call <strong>World</strong> War II, are therefore owed to earlytwentieth-century<br />

military codes rather than the neo-Confucian<br />

bushidô of the Tokugawa-era samurai.<br />

About 1883 Kanô Jigorô decides to divide his jûdô students into two separate<br />

groups, ungraded (mudansha) and graded (yudansha). This<br />

ranking system was innovative, as Japanese martial art schools<br />

previously awarded rank using scrolls (menkyo) rather than<br />

colored belts.<br />

1884 Britain’s Edgerton Castle publishes a history of European<br />

swordsmanship called Schools and Masters of Fence. Probably<br />

the most influential swordsmanship history of the nineteenth<br />

and twentieth centuries, it presents theories that came under<br />

savage attack during the 1990s. Particularly contentious aspects<br />

include the following: first, that Renaissance Italy was the<br />

birthplace of systematic European fencing; second, that older<br />

German swordsmanship was mere rough and untutored fighting;<br />

and finally, that nineteenth-century sport fencing represented<br />

linear evolution toward final perfection.<br />

1889 Hooks become common in Australian and North American<br />

boxing, as do corkscrew punches and combinations of three to<br />

five punches thrown in rapid succession. Queensberry-rules<br />

boxing with padded gloves was the reason—padded gloves protected<br />

knuckles and thumbs from breaking on the opponent’s<br />

head, while ten-second knockouts and rounds that did not end<br />

when a player fell to the ground encouraged boxers to throw<br />

flurries rather than carefully aimed single shots.<br />

1889 Female boxing becomes popular throughout the United States.<br />

Champions included Nellie Stewart of Norfolk, Virginia; Ann<br />

Lewis of Cleveland, Ohio; and Hattie Leslie of New York. <strong>The</strong><br />

audiences were male, and the fighters sometimes stripped to<br />

their drawers like men. Savate fights in which kicking was allowed<br />

were also popular. Girls as young as 12 years headed<br />

the bills.<br />

1896 <strong>The</strong> First International Games are held in Athens, Greece; these<br />

are subsequently renamed the first modern Olympics.<br />

1896 <strong>The</strong> Spanish close a Manila fencing academy known as the<br />

Tanghalan ng Sandata (Gallery of Weapons) because its active<br />

students include the rebel leader José Rizal y Mercado. <strong>The</strong><br />

master of the Gallery of Weapons was Don José de Azes, and<br />

his academy was located at a Jesuit private school known as<br />

Ateneo de Manila. Since de Azes taught both rapier fencing and<br />

Filipino nationalism, either he or his students are probably the<br />

creators of the theory that Spanish fencing influenced the development<br />

of arnis.<br />

1899 An English engineer named Edward W. Barton-Wright pub-<br />

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

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