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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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1911<br />

soldier with patriotic conformity, martial spirit, obedience, and<br />

cont.<br />

toughness of mind and body.”<br />

1912 Xu Yusheng, the vice-director of the Beijing Physical Education<br />

Research Association, introduces studio-style martial art instruction<br />

to north China. Although Hsu taught taijiquan (tai<br />

chi ch’uan) and had studied with Yang Jianhou, Song Shuming,<br />

and other famous boxers of his day, he was an intellectual.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore he taught taijiquan as national gymnastics, rather<br />

than as training in pugilism or self-defense.<br />

1912 <strong>The</strong> Shanghai Chinese YMCA organizes a course in quanfa,<br />

since the youths who come for self-defense lessons usually discover<br />

that they like the foreign games of volleyball, basketball,<br />

and baseball even better, and thus are more amenable to Protestant<br />

proselytizing.<br />

1913 A Japanese police official named Nishikubo Hiromichi publishes<br />

a series of articles arguing that the Japanese martial arts<br />

should be called budô (martial ways) rather than bujutsu (martial<br />

techniques), as their purpose is to teach loyalty to the emperor<br />

rather than practical combatives. In 1919, Nishibuko became<br />

head of a major martial art college (Bujutsu Senmon<br />

Gakkô) and immediately ordered its name changed to Budô<br />

Senmon Gakkô, and subsequently Dainippon Butokukai publications<br />

began talking about budô, kendô, jûdô, and kyûdô<br />

rather than bujutsu, gekken, jûjutsu, and kyujutsu.<br />

1917 Funakoshi Gichen, a 53-year-old Okinawan schoolteacher,<br />

demonstrates Naihanchi kata during the First National Athletic<br />

Exhibition in Kyoto. Although this introduced karate into<br />

Japan, no one there expressed much interest until 1921, when<br />

Kanô Jigorô added atemi-waza (vital point techniques) to the<br />

curriculum of Kôdôkan Jûdô.<br />

1918 Believing that physical exercises will create healthier workers<br />

and fitter soldiers, Bolshevik leaders encourage their workers<br />

and soldiers to exercise; because few Russians have access to<br />

gyms or swimming pools, wrestling is encouraged.<br />

1919 Huo Yuanjia of Tianjin establishes the Jin Wu Athletic Association<br />

in Shanghai. Although organized along the same lines as a<br />

YMCA, the nationalism of its founders was Chinese rather<br />

than North American or European. <strong>The</strong>refore its instruction included<br />

training in the Chinese martial arts rather than Swedish<br />

gymnastics or Canadian basketball.<br />

1919 In order to give a cut over his eye time to heal, Jack Dempsey<br />

starts wearing padded headgear while training for a world<br />

championship fight in Toledo, Ohio. Because Dempsey won<br />

that fight in three rounds, the practice quickly became standard<br />

during professional training and amateur boxing.<br />

About 1920 Romantic fantasies in which Chinese heroes overcome foreign<br />

invaders through military prowess become popular in China.<br />

<strong>The</strong>ir plotting was subsequently a staple of Chinese martial arts<br />

films.<br />

About 1920 Three competent professional wrestlers (Joseph “Toots”<br />

Mondt, Billy Sandow, and Ed “Strangler” Lewis) associated<br />

with the 101 Ranch Show invent “Slam Bang Western Style<br />

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

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