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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Jose kenpô stylist called Black Militant Ohm, a ringside announcer<br />

invents the term kickboxing.<br />

1974 Mike Anderson, a taekwondo instructor from Texas, introduces<br />

brightly colored uniforms to North American tournament<br />

karate, so as to add visual excitement to the sport; previously<br />

karate uniforms were black, white, or a combination of black<br />

and white.<br />

1980 Stephen Hayes introduces the Tôgakure-ryû Ninjutsu of Hatsumi<br />

Masaaki into the United States. While Tôgakure-ryû is a<br />

relatively mainstream Japanese martial art, its popularity in the<br />

United States is owed mainly to the unrelated (but nearly simultaneous)<br />

publication of <strong>The</strong> Ninja, a novel by fantasy writer<br />

Eric van Lustbader that portrays the ninja as bulletproof,<br />

black-clad sadists.<br />

1981 Due to the commercial success of chop-socky movies, the People’s<br />

Republic of China repairs the damage to the exterior of<br />

the Shaolin Temple at Changzhou and replaces its four aged<br />

monks with dozens of politically reliable martial art teachers.<br />

From a commercial standpoint, the move was wildly successful,<br />

and by 1996, there were nearly 10,000 Chinese and foreign<br />

students attending wushu academies in the Shaolin valley<br />

(Smith 1996, A1, A16).<br />

1981 Park Jung Tae, a senior instructor of the International Taekwondo<br />

Federation living in Canada, introduces taekwondo<br />

into North Korea. <strong>The</strong> South Korean government is outraged.<br />

1986 In Tokyo, the Ministry of Education proposes allowing kendô<br />

and jûdô to be termed budô (native Japanese techniques that constitute<br />

martial ways) rather than kakugi (combative technique).<br />

1991 In California and New York, “karate aerobics” and “executive<br />

boxing” become the rage among working women looking for a<br />

new form of aerobic exercise.<br />

1993 New York music promoter Robert Meyrowitz organizes a payper-view<br />

Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) in which<br />

competitors are free to punch, kick, or wrestle their opponents.<br />

At first, most participants were trained in styles that emphasized<br />

either striking (e.g., punching or kicking) or grappling but<br />

not both, and during such contests, Gracie Jiu-jitsu, which emphasized<br />

groundwork, proved most successful. <strong>The</strong>n both strikers<br />

and grapplers began cross-training, and within a few years<br />

champions had to be competent at both striking and grappling.<br />

Joseph R. Svinth<br />

Excerpted from Kronos: A Chronological History of the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> and Combative<br />

Sports, http://ejmas.com/kronos/index.html. Copyright © Joseph R. Svinth<br />

2000–2001. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission.<br />

Select Bibliography<br />

Alcock, Leslie. 1980. Arthur’s Britain: History and Archaeology, AD 367–634. New<br />

York: Penguin Books.<br />

Alford, Violet. 1962. Sword Dance and Drama. London: Merlin.<br />

Almeida, Ubirajara G. 1986. Capoeira: A Brazilian Art Form. 2d ed. Berkeley, CA:<br />

North Atlantic Books.<br />

Chronological History of the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 829

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