|
|
 |
History Of TaeKwonDo
The martial arts have grown out of a human need for self-defense. While
Westerners tend to think of martial arts as Eastern, there are paintings
on the tombs in Egypt dating back to 3000 B.C. demonstrating hand-and-foot
fighting. From another Western cultural center of the ancient world, the
Greek philosopher Plato mentions skiamachia, fighting without an opponent
(analogous to our TaeKwonDo forms), combining skills from boxing and
wrestling so that the whole body is used as a weapon.

We in the International TaeKwonDo Alliance recognize TaeKwonDo, Korean in
origin, as the preeminent martial art, an unequaled method of unarmed
self-defense that is also highly artistic in its execution. TaeKwonDo
techniques have evolved over thousands of years to achieve the greatest
speed, power, and artistic beauty.
The history of TaeKwonDo began roughly ten thousand years ago when the
ancestors of the Korean people migrated from Central Asia to the peninsula
that is now Korea. They relied mainly on hunting to survive, climbing
rugged mountains, crossing strong rivers, and traveling along the seashore
in their search for food. These rigors developed strong bodies, superior
fighting skills, and a sense of teamwork. Historians theorize that, upon
their return, the hunters would reenact their motions of kicking,
punching, stabbing, and throwing, also recreating fighting scenes with
neighboring tribes with whom they had fought during the hunt. A natural
outgrowth of reenactments was practicing movements in order to refine and
perfect the techniques and their skills. Through time, these techniques
formalized into martial arts.
Formal martial arts training in Korea began approximately 4000 years ago,
consisting of running (daligi), throwing (dunjiki), punching or striking (jileuki),
kicking (balchaki) and swimming (soo young). Weapons were also employed
and included the stone knife (dolkal), stone spear (dolchang),stones for
throwing (doldunjiki), sand spreading (moraisul), and wooden pole (mok
bong sul). Eventually, archery and horseback riding were incorporated.
In the 6th
century A.D., the Silla Dynasty ruled the smallest of the three kingdoms
of Korea and was under constant attack from its neighbors. During the
reign of the twenty-fourth king of Silla, the young aristocrats and
warriors formed an elite corps called the Hwa-Rang-Do. To guide themselves
and give a purpose to their knighthood, they adopted a five-point code of
conduct set forth by their greatest monk and scholar, Wan Kany: 1) loyalty
to one's country, 2) loyalty to one's parents, 3) trust and brotherhood
among friends, 4) courage never to retreat in the face of one's enemies,
and 5) justice never to take a life without cause. These students were
also required to learn and live by the following Hwa Rang Do Nine Virtues:
humanity, courtesy, trust and friendship, goodness, loyalty, honor,
knowledge, courage, and conscience. The Hwa Rang-Do warriors became known
for their courage and skill in battle, gaining respect from even their
bitterest foes. From their victories, the Korean Peninsula was united.
TaeKwonDo warriors were taught to keep their minds and bodies in balance.
They were taught to read and write and studied literature, painting,
sculpture, dance, and musical instruments. The moo kwa (national
examination for military officials) consisted of an actual martial arts
contest and tests covering theory and strategy. The moo kwa produced
military officials with both fighting knowledge and a good classical
education. The ITA echoes the ancient emphasis on mental development with
our book club and required reading lists for rank and certification
candidates, ensuring that our leaders gain greater insight through
literature pertaining to the human experience. In the past, TaeKwonDo
artists were known to be the kingdom or community members with the
greatest skill and knowledge. They were expected to dedicate themselves to
continuous training of the mind, body, and spirit (ki). This expectation
continues today in ITA curriculum.
During
the Koguryo Dynasty, martial arts flourished. However, by the Yi Dynasty,
an anti-military posture was taken, debasing anything martial. The final
blow was delivered by the Japanese occupation of Korea (1909 – 1945) when
it was forbidden to practice any form of martial arts. However, Taek Kyon
was secretly practiced and passed on to a handful of students. With the
liberation of Korea in 1945, the new Republic of Korea (ROK) Armed Forces
became organized. Choi Hong Hi, an officer in this army, began to teach
martial arts to his soldiers. At nearly the same time Grandmaster Lee Won-kuk
founded Chung Do Kwan and developed the largest civilian gym, called the
Gym of the Blue Wave. All of the present day TaeKwonDo styles have their
beginning in one of the five Kwans: Chung Do Kwan (significant to the ITA
because our roots can be traced directly back to that gym), Song Moo Kwan,
Ji Do Kwan, Moo Do Kwan, and Chang Moo Kwan. Chung Do Kwan was the largest
and the only gym whose ranks were recognized by General Choi when
civilians became soldiers. On 11 April 1955, a board of instructors from
the different Kwans, historians, and other prominent persons selected
Tae-Kwon-Do (foot – hand – art) as the new name of the national martial
art of Korea. Following years of research and development by General Choi,
the Chang Hun style of TaeKwonDo, named for General Choi’s pseudonym, was
developed.
After 10,000 years, this Korean martial art has reached full maturity,
developing from tribal dances of the hunt to an art form practiced in more
than sixty countries by millions of students. This combination of
classical techniques and new modifications has resulted in a form of
self-defense and mental conditioning unrivaled in the modern world. As
General Choi Hong Hi said, "TaeKwonDo indicates the mental training and
the techniques of unarmed combat for self defense as well as health,
involving the skilled application of punches, kicks, blocks, and dodges
with bare hands and feet…enabling the weak to possess a fine weapon
together with the confidence to defend him or herself, and defeat the
opponent."
The International TaeKwonDo Alliance (ITA) continues to preserve the
historic traditions of TaeKwonDo first conceived 4000 years ago by early
artists, and recently revised by General Choi. The ITA acknowledges
Grandmaster Lee Won-kuk, the founder of Chung Do Kwan, as the beginning
influence from which we came. Grandmaster Lee was the teacher of many
students who eventually assumed major positions within the martial arts
community. Grandmaster Lee said that students must never forget to
appreciate their teachers. At the same time, students should always strive
to have better techniques and higher moral characters than their teachers.
Grandmaster Lee compared this idea to an old saying: "The color green
comes from the color blue, but the green color is brighter than the blue.
The ice comes from water, but ice is colder than water." In other words,
the student is always better than his teacher. He believed that the
martial arts will have a bright future if students live by these ideas.
When a student does become better than his teacher, he must always remain
humble and never forget to appreciate the techniques and moral code that
he learned from his teacher. Once a student becomes a master, he should
not forget that his position was a joint effort of both his and his
teacher's sweat. Without the teacher, he could never have reached the
level of master, just as there could be no ice without water and no green
color without blue. The ITA pledges itself to contributing to the art of
TaeKwonDo, providing leadership and instruction in an ancient discipline
that represents an alternative allowing practitioners to avoid the
stresses and pitfalls of life in this modern age. This can be accomplished
by teaching practitioners to strengthen their minds and bodies through
regular TaeKwonDo training and to impact society honorably. This mission
will be undertaken within the guidelines of our tenets: Honor, Courtesy,
Integrity, Perseverance, Self Control, Courage, and Community.
Note: The ITA would like to thank Dr. He-Young Kimm, the world's
most renowned martial arts historian, for his contribution to this section
on history.
|
|