The History and Philosophy of Wing Chun Kung Fu
In the Beginning...
The deep nature of our own species, and those that
preceded us in evolution, includes competition, violence, and killing.
Prehistoric men no doubt fought one another for dominance, food, mating rights,
and survival.
The dawn of a structured or scientific
approach to fighting no doubt occurred with the first primitive man to pick up
a stick with which to strike an enemy or prey.
Conflict and warfare form pivotal events in
human history. Arguably, many ancient rituals, sports and ceremonies are
reenactments of battles in one form or another. The Olympic Games held by the
ancient Greeks were regarded as a religious festival, during which war was
suspended.
The Epic of Gilgamesh, written down in
about the eighteenth century B.C. in Mesopotamia, one of the earliest centres
of civilisation, shows that most weapons of war had been invented by then, the
major exception being explosives, which were to be invented by the Chinese
almost 2800 years later.
Gilgamesh, a hero of Uruk in Babylonia, fought with
axe, sword, bow and arrow, and spear. His contemporaries used battering rams
against enemy cities, and rode to battle in chariots
The concept of a martial art or science of
combat no doubt developed along with civilisation. Organised warfare required
trained and disciplined soldiers, and generals and instructors to command and
train them.
The earliest accepted evidence of a martial
art exists in two small Babylonian works of art dating back to between 2000 and
3000 B.C., each showing two men in postures of combat.
Whilst there is almost no other evidence to support
the hypothesis that martial arts originated in Babylonia and Mesopotamia, and
were carried eastward to India and China, there is evidence that trade took
place between the Harappa culture of Northern India and the Mesopotamians as
early as 2500 B.C. Also, there is evidence that a particular design of bronze
axe was in use over a vast area including parts of Europe and China around 1300
B.C. There is also evidence that the performances of acrobats from India and
the eastern Mediterranean regions were enjoyed by the Chinese. The martial arts
and performing arts have had a long tradition of association in the East,
mirroring the similarity between the movements of acrobats and martial artists
While the case for the origin of martial
arts in Mesopotamia is speculative, there is no doubt that they first appeared
in the East in a primitive form, and it was in India and China that their
development into the intricate and sophisticated systems of recent times took
place.

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