Sunday, June 9, 2019

The history of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu

part 1

Start
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  "Where does this all start?"

I don't think anyone can answer this question with certainty, but there are many good assumptions. Every culture has some form of hand-in-hand battle in its history. Fighting without weapons usually takes the form of wrestling and sometimes boxing. From the historical timetable, a good assumption is that the wrestling technique of Jiu Jitsu is likely to come from ancient Greece. The Olympics is one of the most powerful traditions in Greece. Probably along with the Greek idea, it is one of the most popular sports, Pankration. Pankration is a sport involving boxing and wrestling techniques and is more popular for Greeks than sports alone. Pankration was later eclipsed by the Roman gladiators and was banned from participating in the Olympics by Christian leaders of the Roman Empire. Even if the new rulers come and go, Greek customs and ideas still come to India, and the foundation of Jiu Jitsu is likely to have been born. During the conquest of Alexander the Great [356-323 BC], he welcomed the Greek culture to the area he had acquired. His conquest continued to extend to India, where he introduced the customs and ideals of Greek culture to the people of the region. After that, Jiu Jitsu was not officially taught in Japan for more than a thousand years. Many people say that the influence of Greece in India has led to the development of kung fu, or the development of weapons-oriented martial arts [martial arts] in China.

Chinese people have many stories to support their martial arts history. The general view accepted by most historians is that systematic martial arts techniques come from India and Budhi Dharma. The concept here is that Shaolin Temple was built in the center of China, which is where Bodhi Buddhism introduced Buddhism and boxing [senzuikyo]. [Refer to Aikido and Chinese martial arts, Sugawara and Xing] The story of support for Jiu Jitsu from China occurred during the fall of the Ming Dynasty. It said that a man named Chingempin came from Japan and lived in a Buddhist temple in Tokyo, where he met three Ronin [no warriors] named Fukuno, Isogai and Miura. Chingempin told Ronin that he had seen a fighting art in China. Luo Ning is particularly interested in the study of this art, so he taught in Japan, and this art became Jiu Jitsu.

The next theory is that there have been many forms of wrestling in China. The most notable of these is Horn Wrestling, called Jiaodixi. This form of wrestling was carried out by the Mongols and later evolved into wrestling without corners. This form of wrestling can be seen in the culture of Native Americans [obvious in typical Native American Buffalo headwear] and most likely to migrate through the Mongols to modern Alaska today. Jiaoli evolved into Xiangpu, and this form of wrestling is said to have become Sumo in Japan. Another theory says that there is a practitioner of Chikura Karube, a wrestling movement developed around 200 BC. It said that Chikura Karube later became Japanese Jiu Jitsu.

The last story mentioned here is that Jiu-Jitsu is Japanese and Japanese. This story follows the same basic idea, but the difference is that Chingempin launched an early Jiu Jitsu [not yet known as Jiu-Jitsu] called Kempo in Japan, which has encountered strikes and few embarrassments most of the time. hold. Since then, the Japanese have developed it into a more effective art of fighting. One thing that is true about these stories is that the Japanese have a responsibility to refine a fighting art into a very complex cuddling system called Jiu Jitsu.

The history of the techniques of picking up this book is very interesting. In doing so, I decided to look for something in common between the stories, namely:

All ancient cultures have some form of fighting and unarmed fighting skills.
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  Greek culture provides its fighters with the greatest financial and social returns. During the time of Alexander the Great, the ancient Greeks acquired quite a number of territories, including those where the technique of jujitsu was said to come from.

Jiu-Jitsu did wrestle in China and Mongolia before Japan. Interestingly, this is the place where Native American wrestling is most likely to come from Alaska Ice Bridge immigrants.

Jiu-Jitsu's pinning and throwing techniques are very similar to Greco Roman Wrestling, and in some cases as well.

Development of Jiu Jitsu
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  Jiu-Jitsu itself was developed in Japan during the feudal period. It was originally an art designed for war, but after Japan abolished the feudal system, it needed some modifications to the art to make it suitable for practice. In the feudal era, Jiu-Jitsu was also known as Yawara, Hakuda, Kogusoko and various other names. The earliest recorded use of the word "Jiu-Jitsu" occurred in 1532 and was covered by Takenouchi Ryu [school]. During this time, art history is uncertain because teachers keep all their secrets, make their art meaningful, and then change their artistic stories to meet their own needs.

After the end of the feudal period in Japan [no need for jujitsu on the battlefield], a method of realistic practice of art is needed, which is why Jigoro Kano [1860--1938], the practitioner of Jiu Jitsu, developed himself. The Jiu-Jitsu system was called judo in the late 1800s. Judo is helpful because it allows the practitioner to try art at the same time honestly and realistically. Judo's most important contribution to the practice of Jiu Jitsu is the concept of Rondori. Rondori is a form of reservation that contains a series of rules of exercise that make the exercise safe and real. Because of the sports outlets [the rules that make practice safe], Jiu-Jitsu students from Kano School can practice more often because they don't always recover from injuries. This will increase the training time of Kano School students and greatly enhance their abilities. Judo [Kano's Jiu Jitsu version] fades from the full form [Jitsu], but still contains enough technology to maintain its realistic effect. One problem that has occurred is that, in Kano's view, ground work is not as important as achieving throwing or shooting down, so there is no emphasis on ground combat in judo and it is weakened in the system. Judo also began to make too many rules and regulations in the art to make it more like the Olympic movement. Leg locks are not allowed. When the battle reaches the ground, a player only has 25 seconds to escape a hold or hit before the game fails. These are some of the rules that hinder judo as a form of self-defense in reality. So why is judo soaring, why is it so great? Even with all the rules and restrictions, the time-tested principle of "pure fighters defeating pure forwards" still applies. The fact remains that most battles, even those that occur between inexperienced strikers, will ultimately become key. You see the clinic in almost every boxing match, usually need to throw hundreds of boxing to end the strike, which gives the grabber a lot of opportunities to bring his/her opponent to the ground, a pure striker has no experience, no Struggling pity.

After the old Jiu Jitsu and Judo in the Tokyo Police Headquarters, Judo was awarded the Japanese National Martial Arts. This is the official artwork used by law enforcement agencies in the late 1800s and is still very popular today. During the Second World War, many American soldiers came into contact with judo art and shipped them back to the United States. The first issue of "Black Belt" magazine in the United States [1961], featuring judo throwing, is a special judo problem.

Until the birth of martial arts in Hollywood, the mystery of the martial arts myth was pushed to the public's attention on a large scale. Especially in the United States, Bruce Lee is one of the greatest martial arts catalysts in the world today. Bruce Lee is actually a judo student, doing a lot of research on cuddles while he was still alive. He criticized traditional martial arts as ineffective, but ironically, through his films spread more about the myth of martial arts, rather than almost anyone in the history of martial arts.

Jigoro Kano is the founder of Judo. However, judo is just a style of Jiu Jitsu, not a separate martial art. Kano was not the first to use the name of the judo school judo he studied, which would be the source of most of his judo techniques, which he used before the end of 1800 and #39. ; S.

The first use of the Judo name was Seijun Inoue IV, which he applied to his Jikishin-ryu's Jujitsu. Jikishin-ryu judo students should not only master their seventy-seven skills, but also develop into generous and polite people.

Kunoori Suzuki V, Kito-ryu master [Kito means rise and fall] Jiu Jitsu, changed the name of Kito-kumiuchi to Kito-ryu judo in 1714. Kito ryu will provide the most important contribution to judo is the principle kuzushi [off-balancing ], this is the key to modern judo throwing technology. Jigoro Kano studied the judo of Jikishin-ryu and Kito-ryu and incorporated some of their concepts into his original system, which he named Kodokan Judo.

Judo is made up of many styles of Jiu Jitsu, which were studied by Master Kano. The most famous is Jikishin-ryu, Kito-ryu, and later Fusen-ryu will be included in its basic work [ne waza], because Kano will ask the owner's style,...




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