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Encyclopedia > Mestre Bimba

Mestre Bimba (born Manuel dos Reis Machado November 23, 1900, Salvador, Brazil - February 15, 1974) was a mestre (a master practitioner) of the Afro-Brazilian martial art Capoeira. This image has been released into the public domain by the copyright holder, its copyright has expired, or it is ineligible for copyright. ... is the 327th day of the year (328th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... Ğ: For the film, see: 1900 (film). ... Salvador and Baía de Todos os Santos from space, April 1997 Salvador (in full, São Salvador da Baía de Todos os Santos, or in literal translation: Holy Savior of All Saints Bay) is a city on the northeast coast of Brazil and the capital of the northeastern... is the 46th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ... Year 1974 (MCMLXXIV) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display full calendar) of the 1974 Gregorian calendar. ... Afro-Brazilian or African Brazilian is the term used to racially categorise Brazilian citizens who are black or part-black, yet it is rarely used in Brazil. ... Hawaiian State Grappling Championships. ... Capoeira (IPA: ) is a Brazilian fight-dance, game, and martial art created by enslaved Africans during the 17th Century [1] Participants form a roda (circle) and take turns playing instruments, singing, and sparring in pairs in the centre of the circle. ...


The son of Luiz Cândido Machado and Maria Martinha do Bonfim, Manuel he was born at the "bairro do Engenho Velho", Salvador. The nickname "Bimba" came up due to a bet between his mother and the midwife during his birth; his mother bet that he was going to be a girl and the midwife bet he would be a boy. After he was delivered, the midwife said... it's a boy, look at his "bimba" (male sexual organ).


He started learning Capoeira when he was 12 years old, with a capitão da Companhia Baiana de Navegação (Navigation Captain) from Estrada das Boiadas (present day bairro da Liberdade) in Salvador called Bentinho, even though, in those days, Capoeira was still being persecuted by the authorities. He would later be known as one of the legendary founding fathers of contemporary Capoeira. The other would be Mestre Pastinha, the father of Capoeira Angola Capoeira (IPA: ) is a Brazilian fight-dance, game, and martial art created by enslaved Africans during the 17th Century [1] Participants form a roda (circle) and take turns playing instruments, singing, and sparring in pairs in the centre of the circle. ... Mestre Pastinha (born Vicente Ferreira Pastinha April 5, 1889, Salvador, Brazil - November 13, 1981) was a mestre (a master practitioner) of the Afro-Brazilian martial art Capoeira. ...

Contents

The Birth of the Regional Style

At 18, Bimba felt that Capoeira had lost all its efficiency as a martial art and an instrument of resistance, becoming a folkloric activity reduced to nine movements. It was then that Bimba started to retrieve movements from the original Capoeira fights and added movements from another African fight called Batuque - a vicious grappling type of martial art that he learned from his father (of which his father was a champion), as well as introducing movements created by himself. This was the beginning of the development of Capoeira Regional. Hawaiian State Grappling Championships. ... A world map showing the continent of Africa Africa is the worlds second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. ... Batuque was a Brazilian game played in Bahia in the early part of the twentieth century but now extinct. ...


In 1928, a new chapter in the history of Capoeira began, as well as a change in the way black people (of African descent, brought to Brazil as slaves) were looked upon by the Brazilian society. After a performance at the palace of Bahia's Governor, Juracy Magalhães, Mestre Bimba was finally successful in convincing the authorities of the cultural value of Capoeira, thus ending its official ban in the 1930s. The Buxton Memorial Fountain, celebrating the emancipation of slaves in the British Empire in 1834, London. ...


Mestre Bimba founded the first Capoeira school in 1932, the Academia-escola de Cultura Regional, at the Engenho de Brotas in Salvador, Bahia. Previously, Capoeira was only practiced and played on the streets. However, Capoeira was still heavily discriminated by upper class Brazilian society. In order to change the slyness, stealthy and malicious reputation associated with Capoeira practitioners at that time, Bimba set new standards to the art.


His students had to wear a clean, white uniform, show proof of grade proficiency from school, show good posture and many other standards. As a result, doctors, lawyers, politicians, upper middle class people, and women (until then excluded) started to join his school, providing Bimba with better support. While not moving, a human can be in one of the following main positions. ...


Capoeira Regional is Established

In 1936, Bimba challenged fighters of any martial art style to test his Regional style. He had four matches, fighting against Vítor Benedito Lopes, Henrique Bahia, José Custódio dos Santos (Zé I) and Américo Ciência. Bimba won all matches.


In 1937, he earned the state board of education certificate after he was invited to demonstrate Capoeira to the then President of Brazil, Getúlio Dorneles Vargas. Getúlio Dornelles Vargas (April 19, 1882 - August 24, 1954) was the president of Brazil from 1930 to 1945 and from 1950 to his suicide in 1954. ...


In 1942, Mestre Bimba opened his second school at the Terreiro de Jesus - rua das Laranjeiras; today rua Francisco Muniz Barreto. The school is still open today and supervised by his former student, "Vermelho". He also taught capoeira to the army and at the police academy. He was then considered "the father of modern Capoeira".


Important names to the Brazilian society at that time such as Dr. Joaquim de Araújo Lima (Ex-Governador of Guaporé), Jaime Tavares, Rui Gouveia, Alberto Barreto, Jaime Machado, Delsimar Cavalvanti, César Sá, Decio Seabra, José Sisnando and many others were Bimba's students.


Bimba's Legacy

Mestre Bimba was a coalman, carpenter, warehouse man, longshoreman, horse coach conductor, but mainly Capoeirista. Unhappy with false promises and lack of support from local authorities in Bahia, he moved to Goiânia in 1973 by invitation from a former student. He died a year later, on February 15, 1974 at the Hospital das Clínicas de Goiânia due to a stroke. Coal Coal (IPA: ) is a fossil fuel formed in swamp ecosystems where plant remains were saved by water and mud from oxidization and biodegradation. ... Carpenter at work in Tennessee, June 1942. ... Old warehouses in Amsterdam Inside Green Logistics Co. ... Binomial name Equus caballus Linnaeus, 1758 The horse (Equus caballus, sometimes seen as a subspecies of the Wild Horse, Equus ferus caballus) is a large odd-toed ungulate mammal, one of ten modern species of the genus Equus. ... For other uses, see Stroke (disambiguation). ...


Bimba managed to recover the original values within Capoeira, which were used amongst the black slaves centuries before him. For Bimba, Capoeira was a fight but "competition" should be permanently avoided since he believed it was a "cooperation" fight, where the stronger player was always responsible for the weaker player and helped him to excel in his own fighting techniques.


Mestre Bimba fought all his life for what he strongly believed was best for Capoeira and succeeded. After he died in 1974 one of his sons, Mestre Nenel (Manoel Nascimento Machado), at 14, took over his father's Capoeira academy. Mestre Nenel is still responsible for the remarkable cultural and historical legacy his father left him and he is the President of Filhos de Bimba School of Capoeira.


Bimba's Academy Rules

Bimba strongly believed Capoeira had an extraordinary value as a self-defense martial art, hence his efforts to develop its learning in a structured and methodical way.


Bimba developed a Capoeira teaching method with commandments, principles and traditions, which are still part of the Capoeira Regional up to this day. Some of his commandments are:

  • To stop smoking and drinking since it interferes with the players' performance;
  • To avoid demonstrating one's progression as a Capoeira player outside the academy (the "surprise" factor is crucial);
  • Avoid conversation during training, instead observe and learn from watching.
  • Practice daily the basic fundamentals.
  • Do not be afraid to come close to your opponent - the closer that you get, the more you will learn.
  • Keep your body relaxed.
  • It is better to get beat up in the roda than on the streets.
  • Students must maintain good grades in school

Bimba also established his own Capoeira principles to fundament his Capoeira teaching method:

  • Gingar sempre ” (to keep oneself in constant movement when fighting); “Ginga” is the Capoeira basic movement;
  • Esquivar sempre ” (to dodge away from the opponent's attacks);
  • All movements must have a purpose (attack and correspondent defense movement);
  • To preserve a constant fixed position on the ground (acrobatic jumps makes one vulnerable);
  • To play according to the rhythm determined by the berimbau (Capoeira musical instrument):
  • To respect a player when he/she can no longer defend an attack movement;
  • To protect the opponent's physical and moral integrity (during the practice, the stronger will protect the weaker player).

Consequently, Bimba created several traditions and rituals to support his methodology:

  • A chair was used in order to train beginner students/players;
  • The “ charanga ” is the Capoeira orchestra, composed by a berimbau and two pandeiros;
  • The singing ( quadras e corridos ), songs composed by Bimba to accompany the game;
  • The “ batizado ” (baptism) (first time the student plays Capoeira at the sound of berimbau).

The aspects that still makes Capoeira Regional so peculiar and outstanding is its method:

  • Admission exam (physical test made with Capoeira movements to identify students' abilities);
  • The “ sequência ” (sequence) of the basic 17 Capoeira attack and defence movements;
  • Practice of the different rhythms of the game;
  • Specific movements: traumatizing, projection, connected and unbalancing;
  • Practice of “ cintura desprezada ” (second sequence practice by advanced students);
  • Formatura ” (Capoeira teacher graduation);
  • Especialização ” and “ emboscada ” (specific advanced exams).

Trivia

  • Mestre Bimba is said to have had two birth certificates, dated 1899 and 1900, respectively. 1900 is the date most commonly used.

See also

Capoeira (IPA: ) is a Brazilian fight-dance, game, and martial art created by enslaved Africans during the 17th Century [1] Participants form a roda (circle) and take turns playing instruments, singing, and sparring in pairs in the centre of the circle. ... Mestre Pastinha (born Vicente Ferreira Pastinha April 5, 1889, Salvador, Brazil - November 13, 1981) was a mestre (a master practitioner) of the Afro-Brazilian martial art Capoeira. ... Mestre João Grande was born on January 15, 1933, in the tiny village of Itagi in the south of the state of Bahia, between Ilheus and Itabuna. ... João Pereira dos Santos or Mestre João Pequeno da Pastinha as he is known within Capoeira circles, began his life in Capoeira as a student of Mestre Gilvenson (C. Daniel Dawsons book Capoeira Angola and Mestre João Grande cites Mestre Barbosa as João Pequenos... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...

References

  • http://www.capoeiranyc.com/bimba.html
  • http://www.bimba.co.uk
  • http://www.filhosdebimba.rg3.net

  Results from FactBites:
 
capoeiramalmo.se - Mestre Bimba (1421 words)
Mestre Bimba, som idag är respekterad och ihågkommen av alla, som revolutionerade den traditionella Capoeiran och som utvecklade Capoeira Regional.
Mestre Bimba var hård mot de som ville träna hans Capoeira Regional, därför var de tvungna att vissa sin kapacitet och flexibilitet i några enkla övningar som han begärde och det var Cocorinha, queda de rins och brygga.
Mestre Bimba brukade säga till sina elever "Idag kommer du att gå in i rodan", på det här sättet visade mästaren för eleven att det var dags för hans dop, detta var en stor emotionell händelse för eleven, det var första gången han skulle få spela i rodan med ackompanjemang utav berimbaun.
capoeiramalmo.se - Mestre Bimba (1421 words)
Det sociala erkännandet och den kulturella och atletiska erkännande av Capoeiran är historisk anknuten till Mestre Bimbas kreativa själ och administrativa organisation.
Detta var en hemlig kurs där enbart Mestre Bimbas formados fick deltaga.
Bimba lät fyra eller fem av sina elever att förberedda ett bakhåll mot en elev.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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