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Encyclopedia > War dance
Hawaiian State Grappling Championships.
Hawaiian State Grappling Championships.

Martial arts, also known as fighting systems, are bodies of codified practices or traditions of training for unarmed and armed combat, usually without the use of guns and other modern weapons. People study martial arts for various reasons including fitness, self-cultivation (meditation), mental/character development, and self-defense. Download high resolution version (1200x800, 146 KB)Martial Arts, Hawaiian State Grappling Championships. ... Download high resolution version (1200x800, 146 KB)Martial Arts, Hawaiian State Grappling Championships. ... State nickname: The Aloha State Other U.S. States Capital Honolulu Largest city Honolulu Governor Linda Lingle Official languages Hawaiian and English Area 28,337 km² (43rd)  - Land 16,649 km²  - Water 11,672 km² (41. ... This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ... This article is about firearms and similar devices. ... Fitness in biology refers to individuals ability to propagate its genes. ... Meditation usually refers to a state in which the body is consciously relaxed and the mind is allowed to become calm and focused. ... Self-defense usually refers to the use of violence to protect oneself and is a possible justification for this otherwise illegal act. ...


The martial arts, perhaps due to a half-century of dramatic portrayals in popular media, (particuarly in films starring the famous Martial arts stars such as Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan and Jet Li, (see Orientalism)), have been inextricably bound in the Western imagination to East Asian cultures and people. Martial arts are by no means unique to East Asia, however. Humans around the world have always had to develop ways to defend themselves from attack, often without weapons. As a result, there are many martial arts known and practiced. Popular Asian Martial Arts include Karate, Judo, Kung Fu/Wushu, Tai Chi and Aikido. For further information on a particular art, see the list of martial arts. Martial arts actor Bruce Lee. ... Jackie Chan, born Chan Kong-sang on April 7, 1954, is a Hong Kong martial artist, film actor, director and stuntman. ... Jet Li Jet Li (Traditional: 李連杰; Simplified: 李连杰; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: Li Lien-chieh; Cantonese: Ley5 Lin4 Git6) (born April 26, 1963) is a martial artist and film actor. ... Orientalism is the study of Near and Far Eastern societies and cultures by Westerners. ... East Asia can be defined in either cultural or geographic terms. ... Karate or karate-do (空手道) is a martial art of Okinawan origin. ... Judo (Japanese: 柔道 JÅ«dō) is a martial art, a sport and a philosophy which originated in Japan. ... Alternative meaning: Kung Fu (TV series) Kung fu or gongfu (功夫, Pinyin: gōngfu) is a well-known Chinese term used in the West to designate Chinese martial arts. ... WÇ”shù Wushu (Simplified Chinese: 武术; Traditional Chinese: 武術; pinyin: (  listen)) literally means martial art. It is the correct term for the more commonly known but misused term kung fu, which roughly translates to skill and refers specifically to the energy, feeling and effort expended in doing or making something. ... Tai Chi Chuan or Taijiquan (from Chinese 太极拳 Tàijíquán, literally supreme ultimate fist), commonly known as Tai Chi or Taiji, is a nei chia (internal) Chinese martial art which is known for the claims of health and longevity benefits made by its practitioners and in some recent... Aikido (合気道 Aikidō, also 合氣道 using an older style of kanji), literally meaning harmony energy way, or with some poetic license, way of the harmonious spirit, is a gendai budo â€” a modern Japanese martial art. ... This is a list of martial arts, broken down by region and style. ...


"Martial arts" was translated in 1920 in Takenobu's Japanese-English Dictionary from Japanese bu-gei (武芸) or bu-jutsu (武術): "the craft/accomplishment of military affairs". This definition is translated directly from the Chinese term, wushu (武术; pinyin: wǔ shù; Cantonese: mou seut), literally, "martial art", meaning all manner of Chinese martial arts. ... WÇ”shù Wushu (Simplified Chinese: 武术; Traditional Chinese: 武術; pinyin: (  listen)) literally means martial art. It is the correct term for the more commonly known but misused term kung fu, which roughly translates to skill and refers specifically to the energy, feeling and effort expended in doing or making something. ... Pinyin (拼音, pīnyīn) literally means join (together) sounds (a less literal translation being phoneticize, spell or transcription) in Chinese and usually refers to Hànyǔ Pīnyīn (汉语拼音, literal meaning: Han language pinyin), which is a system of romanization (phonetic notation and transliteration to roman script) for Standard Mandarin used in the... This article is on all of the Yue dialects. ...


This term is slightly anomalous in its English usage. Its strict meaning should be "arts for military use" (flying fighter aircraft, sniper training, and so forth) but in normal usage it is used to refer to formalized systems of training to fight without modern technology. It is nevertheless valuable to distinguish between fighting systems intended for soldiers in battle (even without modern technology) and fighting systems intended for sport or for civilian self-defense. A fighter aircraft is a military aircraft designed primarily for attacking other aircraft, as opposed to a bomber, which is designed to attack ground targets, primarily by dropping bombs. ... The traditional definition of a sniper is an infantry soldier especially skilled in field craft and marksmanship who kills selected enemies from concealment with a rifle at large distances. ...

Contents


Overview

Martial arts are, simply put, systems of fighting. There are many styles and schools of martial arts; however, broadly speaking, they share a common goal - to physically defeat a person or defend oneself. Some Eastern martial arts have a tradition of being about more than simple fighting, and this is perhaps why their practice has been seen as worth preserving in the face of their military obsolescence in modern technological culture. Certain martial arts, such as T'ai Chi Ch'uan may also be practiced to improve mental or physical health. Tai Chi Chuan or Taijiquan (Chinese: 太極拳; pinyin: ; literally supreme ultimate fist), commonly known as Tai Chi, Tai Chi, or Taiji, is a nei chia (internal) Chinese martial art which is known for the claims of health and longevity benefits made by its practitioners and in some...


What differentiates the martial arts from mere unarmed brawling are the organization of their techniques into a coherent system and the codification of effective teaching methods. One common training technique is to have a series of routines called forms (also called kata, poomse, ch'uan, kuen, tao lu, hyung or tuls) which can serve as a dictionary of essential techniques to be memorized and drawn from at need. Martial arts are also characterized by the controlled, mindful application of force in ways selected for empirical effectiveness. In this sense, boxing, fencing, archery, and wrestling can also be considered martial arts. 2004 Armed Forces Amateur Boxing Championships, held in 2003. ... Fencing - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... Archers in Competition Archery is the practice of using a bow to shoot arrows. ... Wrestling may refer to: Sport wrestling Professional wrestling grappling This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...


Not all martial arts were developed in Asia. Savate, for example, was developed as a form of kickboxing in France. Capoeira's athletic movements were developed in Brazil by slaves based on skills brought with them from Africa. Savate (pronounced ), also known as boxe française (French boxing) or French kickboxing, is a French martial art which uses both the hands and feet as weapons and contains elements of western boxing, grappling and graceful kicking techniques (only foot kick, no knee, no tibia). ... KickBoxing Kickboxing is a martial art which was made for beating Muay Thai by Japanese boxing promotor Osamu Noguchi in 1950. ... Capoeira or the Dance of War by Johann Moritz Rugendas, 1835 Capoeira is an Afro-Brazilian martial art developed in the 1500s by African slaves. ...


Martial arts may focus on

Most martial arts include some study of all these, and some explicitly attempt to be complete (Eskrima, many types of Jujutsu, and most traditional Chinese martial arts). 2004 Armed Forces Amateur Boxing Championships, held in 2003. ... For the military operation, see Operation Eagle Claw Eagle Claw is the English name of Yīng Zhǎo Quán, (鷹爪拳) a Chinese martial art which specializes in claw-like grabbing techniques (Chin Na) with the fingers. ... Bamboo Forest Praying Mantis, more commonly known as Southern Praying Mantis, was developed as a kung fu style by the Hakka Chinese. ... In violence, martial arts and sports, a kick is an attack using the foot, knee or leg. ... KickBoxing Kickboxing is a martial art which was made for beating Muay Thai by Japanese boxing promotor Osamu Noguchi in 1950. ... Muay Thai (Thai มวยไทย, IPA /muai32 tʰai32/)means Thai Boxing. ... Taekwondo is the Korean national sport and martial art, and is also one of the worlds most commonly practiced sports. ... Shooto boxing (シュートボクシング)is a new martial art which is not only kicking and punching, but also allows the use of throwing and standing submission. ... Grappling is an element of many martial arts, and consists of techniques for handling the opponent in which the opponent is held or gripped rather than struck. ... In violence/fighting, sports and martial arts Compared with dropping, where a person releases something that just falls down because of gravity, a thrown object (projectile) is released with a certain velocity in a certain direction. ... Andrell Durden (top) and Edward Harris grapple for position during the All-Marine Wrestle Offs. ... Chin Na (Wade-Giles: chin na) or Qinna (擒拿, pinyin: q ) is a Mandarin Chinese term describing joint-manipulation techniques for self defense used in the Chinese martial arts, very often involving the study and use of acupressure points to enhance the efficiency of the techniques applied by the... Jujutsu (also jujitsu, ju jitsu, ju jutsu, or jiu jitsu; from the Japanese 柔術 jūjutsu gentle/yielding/compliant Art) is a Japanese martial art. ... Judo (Japanese: 柔道 JÅ«dō) is a martial art, a sport and a philosophy which originated in Japan. ... Hapkido is a Korean martial art. ... Aikido (合気道 Aikidō, also 合氣道 using an older style of kanji), literally meaning harmony energy way, or with some poetic license, way of the harmonious spirit, is a gendai budo â€” a modern Japanese martial art. ... Kenjutsu (Japanese: 剣術) is a classical Japanese martial art, a koryu budo. ... Respect due to the sword before the practice Iaido (居合道 iaidō), also sometimes called iaijutsu (居合術 iaijutsu) or battojutsu (抜刀術 battōjutsu) is a sword based Japanese martial art that trains the motions associated with drawing a katana from its sheath, striking an opponent, removing blood from the blade, and then... Naginatajutsu (なぎなた術, 長刀術 or 薙刀術) is the art of fighting with a Japanese naginata, a weapon resembling the medieval European glaive. ... Bojutsu (棒術) is the martial art of using a staff weapon called bo (abbreviation of roku-shaku-bo (six-shaku-staff), a shaku being close to one foot long). ... Kendo Kendo (剣道 Kendō, 劍道) is the modern martial art of Japanese fencing, developed from traditional techniques of Japanese swordsmanship known as kenjutsu. ... Fencing - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... A collection of training weapons used in an Eskrima class. ... This article needs to be wikified. ... A collection of training weapons used in an Eskrima class. ... Jujutsu (also jujitsu, ju jitsu, ju jutsu, or jiu jitsu; from the Japanese 柔術 jūjutsu gentle/yielding/compliant Art) is a Japanese martial art. ... Chinese martial arts - Wikipedia /**/ @import /w/skins-1. ...


Some martial arts, such as the traditional Chinese arts, go beyond this to teach side disciplines such as bone-setting, qigong, acupuncture, acupressure (tui na), and other aspects of traditional Chinese medicine. This is a natural extension, as at an advanced level techniques can take advantage of a detailed knowledge of how the opponent's body works to drastically increase the effectiveness of techniques. Qigong (Simplified Chinese: 气功; Traditional Chinese: 氣功; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: chi kung) is an increasingly popular aspect of Chinese medicine. ... Acupuncture chart from the Ming dynasty. ... Acupressure is a traditional Chinese medicine bodywork technique based on the same ideas as acupuncture. ... Tui na (推拏 or 推拿, both pronounced tūi ná), is a form of Chinese manipulative therapy often used in conjunction with acupuncture, moxibustion, Chinese herbalism and qigong. ... Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) also known simply as Chinese medicine (Chinese: 中醫學, zhōngyī xué, or 中药学, zhōngyaò xué) or traditional Oriental medicine, is the name commonly given to a range of traditional medical practices used in China that have developed over the course of several thousand years of history. ...


History

The history of martial arts is both long and universal. Martial arts likely existed in every culture, and at all classes and levels of society, from the family unit up to small communities, for instance, villages and even ethnic groups. One example is tantui, a northern Chinese kicking art, often said to be practiced among Chinese Muslims. Systems of fighting have likely been in development since learning became transferable among humans, along with the strategies of conflict and war. In some places, such as Indonesia and the Philippines, one can still see this plethora of village fighting systems. War is a state of widespread conflict between states, organisations, or relatively large groups of people, which is characterised by the use of violent, physical force between combatants or upon civilians. ...


Every martial arts system and every martial arts school has its own history. This generally falls into two categories: recent history and ancient history.


Recent history, in this context, is relatively verifiable: who did the teacher learn from? Where did the teacher study? What other arts has the teacher studied, and how has the teacher incorporated them into their teaching? Was the teacher given permission to teach by their teacher? What are the teacher's goals in teaching the class?


This last question deserves some explanation. Some classes are taught primarily to teach students to become effective competitors in tournaments. Some classes are taught to attempt to teach the students to defend themselves effectively against some class of imagined situations. Some classes are taught to preserve an ancient tradition. The practical details of these distinct kinds of classes will be very different.


Ancient history, at least in the sense used here, is much more difficult. In fact, for most systems it is essentially a myth --- in the sense that it is propagated by word-of-mouth among students in the absence of verifiable evidence. This is not to say that it is not also true! But the importance of such a history does not depend on its truth: the effect of such a myth on shaping the development of a martial art is probably much greater than the effect of events two hundred years ago (at least five generations of passing the art on from teacher to student). So an art that is believed to be an art of warriors will focus on battlefield effectiveness and weapon use against highly skilled opponents, while an art that is believed to be for self-defense will focus on reactions to surprise attack and multiple opponents. For the computer game, see Myth (computer game). ...


The history of martial arts around the world is therefore quite complex; on the one hand, most groups of people have had to defend themselves and have developed effective fighting techniques, but on the other hand, most of those techniques have been rendered militarily obsolete over the centuries. Even at an individual, rural level, the threat to the safety of a village is now more likely to come from warriors armed with automatic rifles than from men with swords. Furthermore, it is extremely difficult to preserve a martial art; doing so requires many years of teaching at the hands of a good teacher to pass on the art for a single generation. So it is relatively rare that a martial art would survive and become popular in today's culture, and each art that has done so has a unique history. Some generalities can be said, though, and the next few sections will attempt to discuss the overall rise to popularity of some martial arts. An automatic rifle is any rifle capable of fully-automatic fire; a type of automatic firearm. ... A sword (from Old English sweord; akin to Old High German swerd lit. ...


Martial arts in Asia

The teaching of martial arts in Asia has historically followed the Confucian cultural tradition of teacher-disciple apprenticeship. Students are trained in a strictly hierarchical system by a master instructor: Sensei in Japanese ; in Chinese 老師, (Wade-Giles) Lao Shih, (Pinyin) lǎo shī (lit., old master); Cantonese Sifu; 師父 Mandarin (Wade-Giles) Shih fu, (Pinyin) Shī fù (lit., the master-father), 사범님 Sabeomnim (Korean). The instructor is expected to directly supervise their students' training, and the students are expected to memorize and recite as closely as possible the rules and basic training routines of the school. Confucianism (儒家 Pinyin: rújiā The School of the Scholars), sometimes translated as the School of Literati, is an East Asian ethical, religious and philosophical system originally developed from the teachings of Confucius. ... Wade-Giles, sometimes abbreviated Wade, is a Romanization (phonetic notation and transliteration) system for the Chinese language based on Mandarin. ... Cantonese (粵語/粤语, lit. ... Mandarin  listen(Traditional: 北方話, Simplified: 北方话, Hanyu Pinyin: Běifānghuà, lit. ...


Open speculation about training methods or the instructor's motives and personality is generally not tolerated in juniors, as they aren't considered familiar enough with the basic requirements of their respective arts to make realistic distinctions. They are instead encouraged to repeatedly train applications of the forms and techniques that they've been shown in gradually more complex scenarios.


In this Confucian family-based hierarchy, those who enter instruction with the instructor before the student are considered older brothers and sisters; those after, younger brothers and sisters. The instructor's peers are considered aunts and uncles, etc. into other generations above and below. Such clearly delineated relationships, based on seniority, are designed to develop intangibles such as good character, patience and discipline in martial students. As a matter of safety for the instructors, the student body and the individual student, before they are shown anything beyond the most basic conditioning exercises, students learn their place in the school hierarchy. Students should learn how and why to clearly demonstrate respect for others and how to follow the directions of their instructors properly. The traditional schools are said by this reasoning to provide thereby a level playing field for all students, providing a relatively fixed framework for interaction with one's seniors, peers and juniors, so that everyone, not just the physically gifted, can have an opportunity to benefit from the training provided in a martial art school.


Some method of certification can be involved, where one's skills would be tested for mastery before being allowed to study further; in some systems, especially in China, there are no such certifications, only years of close personal practice and evaluation under a master, much like an apprenticeship, until the master deems one's skills satisfactory. This pedagogy, while still preserved and respected in many traditional styles, has weakened to varying degrees in others and is even actively rejected by some schools, especially in the West. Pedagogy is the art or science of teaching. ...


Martial arts in Europe

The peoples of Europe have had a thoroughly war-torn history, and the peoples that survived had highly effective martial arts. However, these martial arts mostly adapted to changing technology, so that while their descendants still exist, they are focused on things like flying helicopters and infantry tactics for riflemen. We generally do not call these martial arts. A satellite composite image of Europe Europe is geologically and geographically a peninsula, forming the westernmost part of Eurasia. ... War is a state of widespread conflict between states, organisations, or relatively large groups of people, which is characterised by the use of violent, physical force between combatants or upon civilians. ... A helicopter is an aircraft which is lifted and propelled by one or more large horizontal rotors (propellers). ...


Antiquity

An important source for understanding how martial arts were dealt with in antiquity is Plato's The Laws (Project Gutenberg text: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1750), which details some of the differences between the Spartan and Athenian practice regarding gymnastics, where the Spartan way is depicted as more war-oriented, even when, occasionally, it was presented in a gymnopaedia-like ceremonial dance. Statue of a philosopher, presumely Plato, in Delphi. ... Project Gutenberg (PG) was launched by Michael Hart in 1971 in order to provide a library, on what would later become the Internet, of free electronic versions (sometimes called e-texts) of physically existing books. ... Sparta (Grk. ... The Acropolis in central Athens, one of the most important landmarks in world history. ... Gymnastics is a sport involving the performance of sequences of movements requiring physical strength, flexibility, and kinaesthetic awareness, such as handsprings and handstands. ... This article is about the Ancient Greek Gymnopaedia festival and dance. ...


Middle ages and renaissance

Some of the oldest written and illustrated material on the subject of European martial arts dates from the 15th and 16th centuries, and was written by notable teachers like Hans Talhoffer, Fiore dei Liberi and George Silver. Some transcripts of yet older texts have survived the oldest being a manuscript going by the name of I.33 and dating from the late 13th century. Portrait of Talhoffer (pictured left), and his coat of arms, from the 1459 Fechtbuch plate 25 of Talhoffers Fechtbuch of 1467, showing two longsword fencers standing in the ward (Stand beid in der Hut) plate 170 of Talhoffers Fechtbuch of 1467, showing rondel dagger combat Hans Talhoffer (also spelled Talhofer... Fiore dei Liberi (ca. ... George Silver was a gentleman in England during the late 16th and early 17th century. ... fol. ... (12th century - 13th century - 14th century - other centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 13th century was that century which lasted from 1201 to 1300. ...


Modern times

Some traditional martial arts have been preserved in one form or another. For example, boxing, archery, and fencing were preserved by being made into a sport; of course this has changed the practice significantly. Some historical fencing has survived, and some groups have attempted to reconstruct old European martial arts from a few surviving combat manuals. This includes such styles as sword and shield, two-handed swordfighting, jousting and other types of melee weapon combat. 2004 Armed Forces Amateur Boxing Championships, held in 2003. ... Archers in Competition Archery is the practice of using a bow to shoot arrows. ... Fencing - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... Historical martial arts reconstructions are attempts at reviving martial arts with no living tradition. ... Historical martial arts reconstructions are attempts at reviving martial arts with no living tradition. ... A style of martial arts first practiced in Europe around 1100s, sword and shield fighting involves using a sword, most commonly a longsword, to attack with, and a shield to defend. ... This article concerns European two-handed sword fighting, as East Asian and other forms already have pages, for instance at kendo and kenjutsu Two-handed swordfighting is a broad and somewhat non-technical term comprising several possible styles and weapons. ... Depiction of a late 13th century joust in the Codex Manesse Jousting scene, by Jörg Breu the Elder (1510s, pen and black ink over black chalk) Jousting is a competition between two knights on horse-back, wherein each knight tries to knock the other off his mount. ...


Another aspect of the reconstruction effort involves more historically recent martial arts and combat sports, such as those practiced during the 1800s and 1900s. A partial list would include bare-knuckle boxing, Bartitsu, quarterstaff fencing according to late 1800s rules, etc. Historical martial arts reconstructions are attempts at reviving martial arts with no living tradition. ... Bare-knuckle is a phrase often used to distinguish between boxing with gloves and the more ancient form of combat sport performed by two individuals fighting without any gloves or other form of padding on their hands. ... Bartitsu stick fighting Bartitsu is an eclectic martial art developed in England during the late 1890s and early 1900s. ... Quarterstaffs in use, from Old English Sports, Pastimes and Customs, published 1891 A quarterstaff is a Medieval English variant of the staff weapon, consisting simply of a long shaft of hardwood, usually oak, hawthorn, hazel or ash. ...


Fighting manuals such as those listed above have served as guides for attempted reconstructions of European martial arts. Another example of such historical martial arts reconstruction is Pankration, which comes from the Greek (pan, meaning all, kratos, meaning power or strength). Unfortunately, it is extremely difficult to record the essential parts of a martial art in written form (or in fact in any form except the training of a body of master students) so these efforts are very difficult and require the practitioners to borrow techniques from living martial arts to fill in the gaps. Historical martial arts reconstructions are attempts at reviving martial arts with no living tradition. ... Pankration is a sport or martial art introduced in the Olympic games in 648 BC. It combined striking and grappling, and a match would be won by submission of the opponent. ...


Unarmed European martial arts that have survived in active form include English boxing, Olympic wrestling, and French savate. Some weapon systems have also survived as folk sports and as self defence methods, including stick-fighting systems such as the Juego del Palo style(s) of the Canary Islands. 2004 Armed Forces Amateur Boxing Championships, held in 2003. ... Andrell Durden (top) and Edward Harris grapple for position during the All-Marine Wrestle Offs. ... Savate (pronounced ), also known as boxe française (French boxing) or French kickboxing, is a French martial art which uses both the hands and feet as weapons and contains elements of western boxing, grappling and graceful kicking techniques (only foot kick, no knee, no tibia). ... Maestro Elisio Deniz fences with a young student Juego del Palo or the Game of the Stick is a traditional martial art/folk sport of stick fighting practiced in the Canary Islands. ...


Other martial arts were made into sports that we no longer recognize as combative, such as some kinds of gymnastics, where the pommel horse is called a horse because it simulates a horse: the art comes from the necessity of a cavalryman to be able to change positions and fight effectively from a the back of a horse. Similar origins exist for the shot put and the javelin throw, as all track and field events have their roots in the practice of war. Gymnastics is a sport involving the performance of sequences of movements requiring physical strength, flexibility, and kinaesthetic awareness, such as handsprings and handstands. ... The pommel horse is an artistic gymnastics apparatus. ... Italian cavalry officers practice their horsemanship in 1904 outside Rome. ... Binomial name Equus caballus The Horse (Equus caballus) is a sizeable ungulate mammal, one of the seven modern species of the genus Equus. ... Shot put The shot put is an athletics (track and field) event involving putting (throwing in a pushing motion) a heavy metal ball, also called the shot, as far as possible. ... The javelin throw is an athletics (track and field) throwing event where the object to be thrown is the javelin, a spear-like object made of metal and fibreglass. ... Athletics, also known as track and field or track and field athletics, is a collection of sport events. ...


Martial arts in North America

While the native peoples of North America certainly had their own effective martial arts, these, like much of their culture, have been almost completely lost. However, the European colonists (and later, Asian immigrants) brought over their own martial arts such as boxing, fencing and wrestling. These have remained relatively rare sports. 2004 Armed Forces Amateur Boxing Championships, held in 2003. ... Fencing - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... Andrell Durden (top) and Edward Harris grapple for position during the All-Marine Wrestle Offs. ...


The interest in Eastern Martial Arts dates back to the late 19th Century, as Americans became involved in China and Japan. This involvement was initially through trade, where the martial arts seen were recorded as eccentricities of strange lands. Relatively few Westerners actually practiced the arts, most seeing them as performances. This view held with many of the first Asians to demonstrate martial arts in America and Europe doing so as part of vaudeville shows.


As Western influence grew in the East a greater number of military personnel spent time in China, Japan and elsewhere protecting Western interests, and advising certain factions on military matters. Initially much of this advice was aimed at changing the Eastern way of fighting to a Western way of fighting, but gradually individual members of the western contingents began to see the value of Eastern martial arts and actually began training in them seriously.


This training resulted in various techniques being incorporated into Western military training. This escalated to the extent that by the Second World War nearly all commandos received training in Japanese jujutsu.


After the War, with large numbers of servicemen stationed in Japan the adoption of techniques and the gradual transmission of entire systems of martial arts to the West started. It was in the 1950's however when this exportation of systems really began to gain momentum. Large groups of US Military personnel were taught Korean arts (Taekwondo) during the War with North Korea and many of these brought their training home and continued to practice and teach after their demobilisation. Tae Kwon Do, Taekwondo or Taekwon-Do is the Korean national sport and most commonly practiced form of mudo. ...


By the 60's the Japanese arts like Karate and Judo had become very popular, the 70's saw martial arts in the movies and thanks to Bruce Lee the rise in popularity of Chinese styles. Karate or karate-do (空手道) is a martial art of Okinawan origin. ... For other uses see film (disambiguation) Film refers to the celluliod media on which movies are printed Film — also called movies, the cinema, the silver screen, moving pictures, photoplays, picture shows, flicks, or motion pictures, — is a field that encompasses motion pictures as an art form or as part of... Martial arts actor Bruce Lee. ...


The exportation saw an increase in the dilution of the arts with many of them being molded into competitive disciplines. Sport Karate for example became a major force internationally with professional fighters and big prizes, television coverage and sponsorship deals.


The 80's saw a rise in interest in non-sport arts, especially those that provided weapons as well as empty hand techniques. This also fed the media with magazines, books and movies embracing the mysticism and lethality of various arts, especially Ninjutsu.


Unfortunately, this huge expansion in popularity of the arts caused a sharp rise in the number of people trying to cash in on the trends. Teachers had to vary their offerings to keep the discerning public happy and some began to develop their own versions of what they thought people wanted. This led to the rise of the 'McDojo', a shopping mall outlet that offered all manner of instruction, often run as a franchise or chain with huge amounts of money being made for a select few at the top of the chain. The offerings were often very shallow and aimed only at high numbers of participants.


In the last decades of the twentieth century, this interest continued but students began to realize that there were many more choices of martial art, and a tremendous diversity in martial arts appeared.


From Vietnam, Burma, The Philippines, Indonesia, South America and almost every other corner of the earth martial arts were unearthed and brought to America where they gained popularity for their effectiveness and difference from the main stream, whilst more and more disciplines from Japan and China were explored for their historical and cultural value.


The mainstream today seems to have shifted away from sport back to practical self-defense. Unfortunately, in many cases this has meant the further dilution of styles with the tendency to take the best from any style but to discard the rest. Luckily there are still many 'purists' that maintain the integrity of the old systems to ensure that they will be available for future generations.


Martial arts Internationally

Every village and tribe around the world had a few trained fighters who passed on their knowledge; unfortunately, it is difficult to pass on a fighting system, so almost all of these have been lost as their practical relevance has declined. However, a few have survived for one reason or another, and a very few of those have seen a recent boom in popularity, perhaps related to the world music phenomenon. Examples of this are Capoeira and some related arts in Cuba, Haiti and Trinidad and Tobago, which were preserved partly through their relationship with Candomblé, Santería, Vodun, and other syncretic religions. Of these, only Capoeira has risen to worldwide prominence, and the others will probably die out. World music is a term that covers all music that is not part of mainstream popular music or classical music and has some kind of ethnic component. ... Capoeira or the Dance of War by Johann Moritz Rugendas, 1835 Capoeira is an Afro-Brazilian martial art developed in the 1500s by African slaves. ... Ilê Axé Iya Nassô Oká - Terreiro da Casa Branca Candomblé is an Afro-American religion practised chiefly in Brazil but also in adjacent countries. ... Lukumí, Regla de Ocha or Afro-Cuba, most widely known as Santeria, (Santería in Spanish) is a set of related religious systems that superficially seem to fuse Catholic beliefs with traditional Yorùbá beliefs. ... The term Voodoo (Vodun in Benin; also Vodou or other phonetically equivalent spellings in Haiti; Vudu in the Dominican Republic) is applied to the branches of a West African ancestor-based religious tradition with primary roots among the Fon-Ewe peoples of West Africa, in the country now known as... Syncretism is the attempt to reconcile disparate, even opposing, beliefs and to meld practices of various schools of thought. ... Capoeira or the Dance of War by Johann Moritz Rugendas, 1835 Capoeira is an Afro-Brazilian martial art developed in the 1500s by African slaves. ...


The 2003 movie Whale Rider featured several scenes involving Mau rakau, a traditional martial art of the Maori people. It involves the use of the taiaha, a 2-handed fighting staff. 2003 is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ... The Whale Rider is a 2003 book by New Zealand Maori author Witi Tame Ihimaera. ... Te Puni, Māori Chief Māori is the name of the indigenous people of New Zealand, and their language. ... A Taiaha (pronounced Tie-uh-ha) is a weapon carried by the Maori warriors of New Zealand. ...


Martial arts also develop among military and police forces to be used as arrest and self-defense methods. One example is Krav Maga, a self-defense system developed by the armed forces of Israel. Another example is Kombato developed for the Brazilian armed forces. Krav Maga (Hebrew קרב מגע: contact combat) is a martial art, at first developed in Czechoslovakia in the 1930s. ... Kombato is a Brazilian military martial art of self defense and security created by a team led by Paulo Albuquerque. ...


Comparisons between martial arts

Comparing the goals, teaching methods and the techniques of different fighting systems in order to understand their similarities and differences is common and controversial. It normally takes many years of training before a practitioner understands the goals of such training. While making comparisons, it is important to keep in mind that some styles are sports oriented (Judo, Tae Kwon Do, Wushu, etc), other Chinese, Japanese and Korean martial arts emphasise "traditional" Confucian teaching methods, and some are self-described as "reality based" (Jeet Kune Do, Defendo, Krav Maga, Kombato etc). Judo (Japanese: 柔道 JÅ«dō) is a martial art, a sport and a philosophy which originated in Japan. ... Taekwondo is the Korean national sport and martial art, and is also one of the worlds most commonly practiced sports. ... WÇ”shù Wushu (Simplified Chinese: 武术; Traditional Chinese: 武術; pinyin: (  listen)) literally means martial art. It is the correct term for the more commonly known but misused term kung fu, which roughly translates to skill and refers specifically to the energy, feeling and effort expended in doing or making something. ... Jeet Kune Do (截拳道 in pinyin: jié quán daò; in Jyutping: zit6 kyun4 dou3; literal meaning: Way of the Intercepting Fist), also Jeet Kun Do or JKD, is the system developed by Bruce Lee. ... Defendo is a close quarters combat system focusing primarily on unarmed self-defense. ... Krav Maga (Hebrew קרב מגע: contact combat) is a martial art, at first developed in Czechoslovakia in the 1930s. ... Kombato is a Brazilian military martial art of self defense and security created by a team led by Paulo Albuquerque. ...


Effectiveness

Many martial arts claim to be effective fighting disciplines within a particular context (unarmed combat between two expert fighters, armed self-defense against multiple attackers, silencing and escaping from an expert opponent seeking to grab and capture the practitioner). Such claims are sometimes difficult to evaluate. Moreover, many practitioners of the martial arts would like to have some evaluation of their own ability compared to others practicing the same martial art or trained in another tradition.


Among the most popular ways of doing so throughout the Americas is through sport martial arts tournaments, exhibitions, and competitions. These types of competitions usually pit practitioners of one or many traditions against each other in two areas of practice: forms and sparring. The forms section involves the performance and interpretation of routines, either traditional or recently invented, both unarmed and armed, judged by a panel of master-level judges, who may or may not be of the same martial art. The sparring section in some martial arts may involve a point-based system of light to medium-contact sparring in a marked-off area where both competitors are protected by foam padding; certain targets are prohibited, such as face and groin, and certain techniques may be also prohibited. Points are awarded to competitors on the solid landing of one technique. Again, master-level judges start and stop the match, award points, and resolve disputes. After a set number of points are scored or when the time set for the match expires (for example, three minutes or five points), and elimination matches occur until there is only one winner. These matches may also be sorted by gender, weight class, level of expertise and even age. Some critics of these point sparring competition note that this type of training teaches students to pull their punches or not throw combination attacks as the fighting is frequently stopped by judges to award points or declare fouls. This disruption alters the flow of actual combat and enforces what some see are the bad habits of not following through on attacks, lowering your guard, and relying on tactics that may score points but lack the power to disable or hurt an actual attacker.


Full-contact martial arts

Some advocates of freestyle or full contact justify their art by stating that in actual hand-to-hand combat the only thing that matters is defeating the enemy. In actual combat, these advocates claim, stylistic differences or the counting of points scored are moot. They argue that if the primary objective in competition is to score points on your opponent, then it's not a martial art but a sport. The logical conclusion of this viewpoint is that there is no such thing as a competition with rules, only gladiatorial affairs resulting in death, disability, or rendering unconscious of one or more of the participants. While this type of contest -- for instance, the Chinese leitai-style contest, where the opponent is not considered completely defeated until thrown off the stage -- has traditionally been the manner in which martial arts are proven, there are few events that maintain this attitude today. For a few examples see SAMBO, jujutsu, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, pancrase, or vale tudo below. Sambo (самбо) -- (also called Sombo and sometimes written in all-caps) is a modern martial art, combat sport and self-defense system developed in the Soviet Union. ... Jujutsu (also jujitsu, ju jitsu, ju jutsu, or jiu jitsu; from the Japanese 柔術 jūjutsu gentle/yielding/compliant Art) is a Japanese martial art. ... Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ), also known as Gracie Jiu-Jitsu (GJJ), is a martial art that was first developed in Brazil by the Gracie family during the mid-20th century. ... Pancrase is the name of an organisation that organizes mixed martial arts tournaments, principally in Japan. ... Vale tudo is a Portuguese term meaning everything goes used to describe mixed martial arts competitions with minimal rules. ...


Many practitioners reject these competitions as a valid comparison between martial arts. Certainly martial arts have a variety of different goals, threat models and styles of problem-solving, so it is extremely difficult to even agree on what "effectiveness" would be for a martial art.


Technical aspects

Fighting is an extremely complex discipline. Professional warriors such as samurai, knights and other soldiers usually spent lifetimes studying fighting, honed by very hard practice and by real combat. Since few people today have such dedication, most martial arts systems focus on one aspect of fighting. Of course, most practitioners would like to have some skill in other aspects, and most arts include some study of many aspects. Often in-depth study of certain aspects is not begun until a practitioner has been training for many years. Japanese samurai in armour, 1860 photograph. ... A silver statue of an armoured knight, created as a trophy in 1850 For the chess piece, see knight (chess). ... A Norwegian soldier (a Corporal, armed with an MP-5) A soldier is a person who has enlisted with, or has been conscripted into, the armed forces of a sovereign country and has undergone training and received equipment to defend that country or its interests. ...


Some aspects of fighting that may be focused on include:

  • Long-range unarmed fighting. In this situation, things happen relatively slowly (hundreds of milliseconds), giving participants time to react to visual stimuli. This allows powerful strikes as well as subtle feints to be performed.
  • Short-range unarmed fighting. In this situation reaction time is such an important factor that visual stimuli are not very useful, and practitioners must learn to react to tactile stimuli. Strikes are still possible but reactions must become reflexes, making feints more difficult.
  • Grappling. In this situation participants are holding each other too closely to permit effective striking. Leverage and physical strength become very important. If not forbidden by rules, biting, pinching and spitting can be very effective at this range.
  • Armed fighting. Fighting with weapons can be rather different from unarmed fighting, both because strikes can become much more destructive and because weapons can drastically increase the reach of a practitioner. Of course, each weapon and each range requires its own techniques, but a cleverly designed teaching system can take advantage of similarities to simplify the study.
  • Moral, emotional, and physical development. The dedication and practice required to acquire skill in a martial art can be very beneficial to the character of a practitioner. Some martial arts systems focus on these effects, and emphasize techniques and training that encourage this development.
  • Fighting against a single opponent. Both traditional duels and most modern sparring matches pit one expert fighter against another, with some set of rules, and after a battle, declare a victor. This has a number of different effects; for example, footwork can be simplified as a practitioner rarely needs to turn quickly. On the other hand, one can expect one's opponent to be about as highly skilled as oneself.
  • Fighting against multiple opponents. Some martial arts systems focus on being able to deal with multiple opponents simultaneously. In order for this to be possible, normally the opponents must be assumed to have less skill than the practitioner. This has technical effects as well, including tight, careful footwork to allow rapid turning, as well as rapid disabling of opponents in order to move on.
  • Fighting without injuring the opponent. Many systems are suggested for police or security work; as such, there is a certain amount of effort devoted to minimizing the damage a practitioner inflicts on an opponent. Disarming, locking and controlling techniques are emphasized in this situation over the simpler striking techniques which disable or kill.
  • Avoidance of fighting. Some martial arts systems are strongly oriented towards practical self-defense, and so some emphasis is placed on defusing or avoiding violent situations rather than fighting.

A millisecond is an SI-derived unit of time, equal to one thousandth of a second. ... For a reflex, reaction time is the time from the onset of a stimulus until the organism responds. ... A reflex action or reflex is a biological control system linking stimulus to response and mediated by a reflex arc. ... A duel or duel of honour is a form of armed combat in which two individuals participate. ... Sparring is a form of training common to many martial arts. ...

Martial arts as sport

On the subject of competition, martial artists vary wildly. Some arts, such as Boxing, TaeKwonDo, Muay Thai, and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu train solely for full contact matches, whereas others like Aikido and Krav Maga actively spurn such competitions. Some schools believe that competition breeds better and more efficient practitioners, and gives a sense of good sportsmanship. Others believe that the rules under which competition takes place have removed the combat effectiveness of martial arts or encourage a kind of practice which focuses on winning trophies rather than the more traditional focus of combat effectiveness, or in East Asian cultures, of developing the Confucian person, which eschews showing off (see Confucius, also renaissance man.) 2004 Armed Forces Amateur Boxing Championships, held in 2003. ... Tae Kwon Do, Taekwondo or Taekwon-Do is the Korean national sport and most commonly practiced form of mudo. ... Muay Thai (Thai มวยไทย, IPA /muai32 tʰai32/)means Thai Boxing. ... Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ), also known as Gracie Jiu-Jitsu (GJJ), is a martial art that was first developed in Brazil by the Gracie family during the mid-20th century. ... Aikido (合気道 Aikidō, also 合氣道 using an older style of kanji), literally meaning harmony energy way, or with some poetic license, way of the harmonious spirit, is a gendai budo â€” a modern Japanese martial art. ... Krav Maga (Hebrew קרב מגע: contact combat) is a martial art, at first developed in Czechoslovakia in the 1930s. ... Confucius (traditionally September 8? 551 BCE–479 BCE) was a famous thinker and social philosopher of China whose teachings have deeply influenced East Asia for twenty centuries. ... Renaissance Man is the title of a 1994 movie starring Danny DeVito. ...


As part of the response to sport martial arts, new forms of competition are being held such as the Ultimate Fighting Championship in the U.S. or Pancrase in Japan which are also known as mixed martial arts or MMA events. While the financial success or failure of these events is not well-known, it is interesting to note that certain systems do indeed tend to dominate these full contact or freestyle competitions. Supporters of those styles which win time and again make the statement that this proves the real-world self defense effectiveness of their art. Ultimate Fighting Championship is an American based mixed martial arts organisation. ... Pancrase is the name of an organisation that organizes mixed martial arts tournaments, principally in Japan. ... MMA may refer to: MacRobertson Miller Airlines, a Western Australian airline (1934-1980s). ...


Martial Arts have also found their way into Western Sports not commonly associated with martial arts. The most famous of these is the Fighting in ice hockey, or "Hockey Fight," which is similar to boxing. The process starts when two hockey players take off their protective gloves and helmets, grab each other and throw punches with their dominant hand. While these actions are not considered true martial arts, they are complex and unique fighting style that has been studied as an art form. : A large fight in a hockey game Fighting in ice hockey is a controversial aspect of hockey. ...


Martial arts and dance

As has been mentioned above, in many cultures martial arts can be performed in dance-like settings, either for evoking fiercefulness (...provoking adrenalin) in preparation of battle, or showing off skill in a more stylised manner, or both.


Examples of such war dances include the gymnopaidiai from ancient Sparta, New-Zealand's Haka, the Sabre Dance depicted in Khachaturian's ballet Gayane, the Maasai "jumping" dance, Brunei's Aduk-Aduk, Qatar's Ayyalah, Brazil's Capoeira, ... (not to forget the spoofing weasel war dance). Gymnopaedia derives from the ancient Greek γυμνοπαιδία, a festivity in Sparta, where naked youths would perform war dances. ... Sparta (Grk. ... Haka, by Manutuke School at Hopuhopu Haka is the generic name for Maori dance. ... This article is about the dance involving swords - for the uncontrollable upward movement of the F-86 Sabre: see Sabre dance The Sabre Dance is a movement in the final act of Aram Khachaturians ballet Gayane, completed in 1942. ... Aram Ilich Khachaturian (Armenian: Արամ Խաչատրյան, Russian: Аpaм Ильич Xaчaтypян) (June 6, 1903 – May 1, 1978) was a composer of classical music. ... Gayane (sometimes written Gayaneh) is a ballet composed by Aram Khachaturian in 1942. ... A Maasai tribesman The Maasai or Masai are an indigenous African tribe of semi-nomadic people located primarily in Kenya and northern Tanzania. ... Capoeira or the Dance of War by Johann Moritz Rugendas, 1835 Capoeira is an Afro-Brazilian martial art developed in the 1500s by African slaves. ... The Weasel war dance is a behavior of extremely excited ferrets. ...


Often there appears some tension between martial arts (considered macho) and dancing (considered more effeminate): e.g. Plato's The Laws devotes some attention to this topic. The solution given to this by the Maasai can be considered amongst the most original: they perform their "jumping" martial dance in women's attire, because, as they say, women are prettier than men. Being macho is overconforming to traditional male gender roles or hypermasculinity and often implies misogyny. ... Effeminacy is character trait of a male showing femininity, unmanliness, womanliness, weakness, softness and/or a delicacy, which contradicts traditional masculine, male gender roles. ... Statue of a philosopher, presumely Plato, in Delphi. ...


Ballet, as it originated at the court of Louis XIV also goes back to a sort of ambiguity between being the strongest and being the most refined: worldly power was granted by the king to his noblemen, according to their ability to perform refined "ballet" dancing. The Waltz of the Snowflakes from Tchaikovskys The Nutcracker Ballet is the name given to a specific dance form and technique. ... (Louis-Dieudonné) (September 5, 1638 – September 1,rance]] and King of Navarre from May 14, 1643 until his death. ...


In addition, in theatre and film, the fight scene is essentially a dance meant to depict hand to hand combat. Theatre is that branch of the performing arts concerned with acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of speech, gesture, music, dance, sound and spectacle — indeed any one or more elements of the other performing arts. ... Film refers to the celluloid media on which movies are printed Film is a term that encompasses motion pictures as individual projects, as well as the field in general. ... A Fight scene is a scene in a dramatic production that is intended to simulate combat with varying degrees of realism. ...


Martial arts and self-defense

In order to justify their existence and to attract students, many (if not most) martial arts schools make claims about their usefulness in "self-defense". Such claims are a matter of constant debate among beginning level students of the martial arts.


Self-defense situations happen with extreme rarity in most modern societies where such martial arts classes exist, and what situations do develop can generally be avoided by other means (e.g., not walking around drunk in bad neighbourhoods, not buying or selling illegal drugs, not getting involved with biker gangs, and so on). Therefore understanding what is needed for self-defense requires understanding the situations that are likely to arise. Retail selling Street selling is the bottom of the chain and can be accomplished through purchasing from prostitutes, through cloaked retail stores or refuse houses for users in the act located in red-light districts which often also deal in paraphernalia, dealers marketing merriment at night clubs and other events... A Motorcycle gang (also known as a Biker gang) is a gang whose members are motorcycle riders. ...


There has been an ever-increasing perception among the general population, fuelled by the mass-media, that they are in constant danger of violence on the streets. It is this fear that self-defense classes are intended to counter. Since the fear is largely unfounded, self-defense classes need only reduce the feeling of fear in order to be effective. In practice, for the people to whom these martial arts classes are being marketed, the most likely situation in which they will experience a physical confrontation is domestic violence. Domestic violence, by barest definition, is violence within a home. ...


Finally, the largest problem confronted by most people who are attacked is not a lack of physical ability to resist but an emotional reaction: a paralyzing panic or an undisciplined, blinding rage can turn a bad situation into a disastrous one.


All this said, years of serious training in martial arts are expected to take the emotional charge out of physically violent confrontations (after hundreds of hours of sparring, a punch or a kick becomes just a fist or a foot, a purely physical force, reduced by experience to something easily dealt with and not a "personal" attack as such) and gives practitioners good general coordination and confidence, both of which can discourage aggressors before aggression begins. So, the experience of physical interaction over an extended period of time in martial arts training may be more relevant to its overall effectiveness at practical self-defense than any individual technique the art in question may include.


The self-defense aspect has also changed the techniques used. In our modern world, we may be attacked by an unarmed person, someone with some sort of clubbing weapon (a baseball bat) or armed with a knife. The chance of being attacked by a fully armored, sword-wielding samurai is practically zero. Most martial arts included battlefield combat techniques in the past, but the emphasis on such techniques has declined in most styles.


Styles of Martial Arts

  • Aikijujutsu is a Japanese martial art which dates back to the samurai. The style some say Aikido came from.
  • Aikido is a Japanese martial art which evolved from Jiu Jitsu and Kendo.
  • Bartitsu was a combination of Jujitsu, savate, boxing and stick fighting, originally founded in England in the late 1800s and recently revived.
  • Capoeira is a survival-oriented dance-fight-game originally developed in the 16th century by Angolan slaves in Brazil for self-defense against the Portuguese oppressor, then further developed by Brazilian street fighters. It emphasizes kicks, dodging, and mental training including trickery, sense of humor, and understanding of rhythm. High-level Capoeira mestres (masters) are adept in unarmed combat, knife fighting, singing, and playing traditional Capoeira music.
  • Fencing (the European Olympic style), exists now almost entirely as a sport.
  • Jeet Kune Do was developed by Bruce Lee, one of the most famous martial arts actors of the 20th century. It means 'Way of the intercepting fist'.
  • Jiu Jitsu is a Japanese martial art with strikes, throws, grappling and locks.
  • Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is also usually known as Gracie Jiu-Jitsu. A much modified version of the original Japanese art which focuses on ground fighting.
  • Judo means gentle way, ('Do' means 'Way of'), a Japanese martial sport that consists of the throws from Jiu Jitsu without any of the striking moves.
  • Karate simply means 'Open/Empty hand', and is perhaps the most popular martial art in Japan and the West. It is Okinawan in origin and has several sub styles including Shotokan, Shotokai and Wado Ryu.
  • Kendo is the Japanese art of sword fighting, using bamboo swords (shinai) and protective clothing.
  • Kung Fu is a term used by Westerners to describe many diverse Chinese martial arts - the Chinese words kung fu can be used to describe one's skill in any discipline, not just martial arts. Chinese styles include: Shaolinquan, Wing Chun, Drunken Boxing, Taijiquan, Xingyiquan, Yiquan, Hung Gar and many more. These styles could be more accurately termed wushu.
  • Ninjutsu is a Japanese style said to have originally been practiced by Ninja, this martial art combines traditional attacks with scout style survival and elusive moves.
  • The different styles of T'ai Chi Ch'uan (Taijiquan) are a Chinese martial art practiced nowadays by many people for health maintenance. Its slow moving training forms are often described as "moving meditation," but are also a catalogue of self-defence techniques. Despite the emphasis on relaxed training the name actually means "Supreme Ultimate Fist" and often uses its soft style interceptions to simultaneously counter attacks and strike the attacker in its advanced level martial training. Traditional T'ai Chi classes at intermediate level and above include two person pushing hands as well as ch'i kung, for greater health benefits and generating coordinated martial power.
  • Yiquan is a relatively modern Chinese martial art, which attempts to move away from traditional concepts.
  • Taekwondo is modern Korean art, similar to Karate except that kicking is given more focus. Along with Judo, one of only two Asian martial arts to make it into the Olympic Games.

Aikijutsu, also known as aikijujutsu, is a form of Japanese martial arts. ... Japanese samurai in armour, 1860 photograph. ... Aikido (合気道 Aikidō, also 合氣道 using an older style of kanji), literally meaning harmony energy way, or with some poetic license, way of the harmonious spirit, is a gendai budo â€” a modern Japanese martial art. ... Kendo Kendo (剣道 Kendō, 劍道) is the modern martial art of Japanese fencing, developed from traditional techniques of Japanese swordsmanship known as kenjutsu. ... Bartitsu stick fighting Bartitsu is an eclectic martial art developed in England during the late 1890s and early 1900s. ... Capoeira or the Dance of War by Johann Moritz Rugendas, 1835 Capoeira is an Afro-Brazilian martial art developed in the 1500s by African slaves. ... Fencing - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... Jeet Kune Do (截拳道 in pinyin: jié quán daò; in Jyutping: zit6 kyun4 dou3; literal meaning: Way of the Intercepting Fist), also Jeet Kun Do or JKD, is the system developed by Bruce Lee. ... Martial arts actor Bruce Lee. ... Jujutsu (also jujitsu, ju jitsu, ju jutsu, or jiu jitsu; from the Japanese 柔術 jūjutsu gentle/yielding/compliant Art) is a Japanese martial art. ... Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ), also known as Gracie Jiu-Jitsu (GJJ), is a martial art that was first developed in Brazil by the Gracie family during the mid-20th century. ... Judo (Japanese: 柔道 JÅ«dō) is a martial art, a sport and a philosophy which originated in Japan. ... Karate or karate-do (空手道) is a martial art of Okinawan origin. ... This article is about the prefecture. ... Shotokan (松涛館) is a school of karate, reflecting the style of the initial students (including his son, Yoshitaka) of master Gichin Funakoshi (1868-1957). ... Shotokai is a style of karate, named after the Shotokai, a group brought together by the family of Gichin Funakoshi after his death in 1957, to look after the arrangements for his funeral. ... Wado-ryu (和道流) is one of the worlds major karate styles. ... Kendo Kendo (剣道 Kendō, 劍道) is the modern martial art of Japanese fencing, developed from traditional techniques of Japanese swordsmanship known as kenjutsu. ... A shinai (Japanese:竹刀) is a practice sword used in Kendo. ... Alternative meaning: Kung Fu (TV series) Kung fu or gongfu (功夫, Pinyin: gōngfu) is a well-known Chinese term used in the West to designate Chinese martial arts. ... Shaolin Quan or Shaolin Chüan (少林拳) (in Cantonese Siu Lum Kuen) is the term typically used to describe the Chinese martial arts that originate from the famous Buddhist Shaolin Temple and monastery at Songshan in Henan, founded in 495 by Tamo. ... Wing Chun (Chinese: 詠春; pinyin: ; Jyutping: wing4 ceon1), also spelled Ving Tsun, is a Chinese martial arts system with an emphasis on unarmed close-range fighting, although it includes weapon techniques and techniques suitable for various ranges. ... Tai Chi Chuan or Taijiquan (from Chinese 太极拳 Tàijíquán, literally supreme ultimate fist), commonly known as Tai Chi or Taiji, is a nei chia (internal) Chinese martial art which is known for the claims of health and longevity benefits made by its practitioners and in some recent... Hsing Yi, (形意拳, Hanyu Pinyin: Xíngyì Quán, Wade-Giles: Hsing-i Chüan, literally Form and Thought Boxing) all refer to a northern Chinese martial art tradition attributed to the legendary Chinese General Yue Fei (岳飛) around 1100 AD. Hsing Yi claims to specialize in deceptively soft, linear, low attacks... Yiquan (Chinese:意拳; pinyin: Yìquán; Wade-Giles: I Chuan; lit. ... Hung Gar (洪家 or in Mandarin/hanyu pinyin, hong jia, lit. ... WÇ”shù Wushu (Simplified Chinese: 武术; Traditional Chinese: 武術; pinyin: (  listen)) literally means martial art. It is the correct term for the more commonly known but misused term kung fu, which roughly translates to skill and refers specifically to the energy, feeling and effort expended in doing or making something. ... This article is about the Japanese espionage martial arts and techniques known as ninjutsu. ... A ninja on the cover of Black Belt magazine. ... Scout can refer to: Scouting An American rocket, Scout (rocket) A Helicopter, Scout (helicopter A professional sports talent scout A reconnoiter This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ... Tai Chi Chuan or Taijiquan (Chinese: 太極拳; pinyin: ; literally supreme ultimate fist), commonly known as Tai Chi, Tai Chi, or Taiji, is a nei chia (internal) Chinese martial art which is known for the claims of health and longevity benefits made by its practitioners and in some... Meditation usually refers to a state in which the body is consciously relaxed and the mind is allowed to become calm and focused. ... Nei chia (Chinese: 內家; pinyin: ; literally internal school) denotes the soft style group of Chinese martial arts, in distinction to the wai chia (Chinese: 外家; pinyin: ; literally external school) or hard style group, which is associated especially with Shaolin Quan (Shaolin Chüan) and its many derivatives. ... Pushing hands, (推手, Wade-Giles tui shou, pinyin tūi shǒu), is a name for two-person training routines practiced in soft style Chinese martial arts such as Pa Kua Chang (Baguazhang), Hsing-i Chuan (Xingyiquan), Tai Chi Chuan (Taijiquan) and I Chuan (Yiquan). ... Qigong (Simplified Chinese: 气功; Traditional Chinese: 氣功; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: chi kung) is an increasingly popular aspect of Chinese medicine. ... Yiquan (Chinese:意拳; pinyin: Yìquán; Wade-Giles: I Chuan; lit. ... Chinese martial arts, often abbreviated as CMA, refers to the enormous variety of martial art styles native to China. ... Tae Kwon Do, Taekwondo or Taekwon-Do is the Korean national sport and most commonly practiced form of mudo. ... The term Asian can refer to something or someone from Asia. ... For months before the Olympic Games, runners relay the Olympic Flame from Olympia to the opening ceremony. ...

Further resources

This is a list of martial arts, broken down by region and style. ... This is a partial list of martial arts weapons. ... Many works of fiction such as movies and books often have characters that practise martial arts, usually they practise existing martial arts such as Judo or Aikido. ... Generic Main article is Martial art. ...

See also

Budo (武道) is a term for Japanese martial arts. ... Chan can be variation of 陳 (Chen), a Chinese family name. ... Kenpo may also refer to the Constitution of Japan (憲法) Kenpo or Kempo (拳法 Kenpō; lit. ... KickBoxing Kickboxing is a martial art which was made for beating Muay Thai by Japanese boxing promotor Osamu Noguchi in 1950. ... Koryu (古流) is a Japanese word that translates literally as old school or old tradition. ... Martial arts film is a film genre that originated in the Pacific Rim. ... Martialism is an approach to self-defense first described by martial arts author Phil Elmore. ... McDojo is a term used by some martial artists to describe a martial arts school where image or profit is of a higher importance than technical standards. ... This article lists military technology items, devices and methods. ... Mixed martial arts (MMA) is the combat sport in which two competitors attempt to achieve dominance over one another by utilizing three general tactics: striking, finishing holds, and control. ... Neo-Confucianism (理學 Pinyin: Lǐxué) is a term for a form of Confucianism that was primarily developed during the Song dynasty, but which can be traced back to Han Yu and Li Ao in the Tang dynasty. ... Qigong (Simplified Chinese: 气功; Traditional Chinese: 氣功; pinyin: ; Wade-Giles: chi kung) is an increasingly popular aspect of Chinese medicine. ... Taoism or the School of Tao refers to a set of philosophical teachings and religious practices rooted in a specific metaphysical understanding of the Chinese character Tao, here encompassing the whole processes of the Universe, considered as to be constantly changing and stemming from the diversification of a unique principle... Cliffside Temple at Wudangshan The Wudang Mountains (武當山; pinyin: wǔ dāng shān, also known as Wu Tang Shan or simply Wudang), are a small mountain range in the Hubei province of China, just to the south of the manufacturing city of Shiyan. ...

External links

  • rec.martial-arts FAQ
  • NewMAG - Martial Arts News, Forums, Classifieds, Blogs and Links.
  • Martial Arts Planet, Articles and Forums
  • Fight Times Free Online Martial Arts Magazine
  • Wu Xia / Martial Arts World @ Sensasian

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At the beginning of the War of 1812 it is estimated that perhaps one third of the inhabitants of Upper Canada for example were American born, some were United Empire Loyalists but others had come just for the cheap farmland and many had little loyalty to the British Crown at the beginning of the war.
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