system dates to the Egyptian Middle Kingdom (2040–1785 B.C.), where
techniques of throws, kicks, punches, and joint locks can be found painted
on the walls of the tombs of Beni-Hassan. This is the oldest recorded “text”
of unarmed fighting techniques in existence. From the variety of physical
maneuvers that are demonstrated, it can be inferred that a high-level sys-
tem of self-defense and unarmed combat existed in Egypt by this time. In
addition, Egyptians clearly had extensive training in armed combat. They
developed two-handed spears that could be wielded as lances, created
shields to protect their warriors in an age when armor was scarce and ex-
pensive, and developed a unique sword, the khopesh,that could be used to
disarm opponents. It is not difficult, in retrospect, to see that military and
martial prowess was one of the reasons that this great civilization was able
to endure for thousands of years.
If one moves forward 2,500 years to the Greek peninsula, martial arts
are clearly documented, not only through material artifacts such as painted
ceramics, but also by firsthand written accounts of practitioners and ob-
servers of these arts. In unarmed combat, the Greeks had boxing, wrestling,
and the great ancestor of the “Ultimate Fighting Championship”: the
pankration (all powers). Boxing during this era was not limited to blows
with the closed fists, but also involved the use of the edge of the hand,
kicks, elbows, and knees. Wrestling was not the “Greco-Roman” variant
of today, but was divided roughly into three main categories. The first type
involved groundwork wherein the participants had to get opponents into a
joint lock or hold. In the second variant, the participants had to throw each
other to the ground, much as in jûdô or Chinese wrestling. The third type
was a combination of the two. In the pankration, the purpose was to get
the opponent to admit defeat by any means possible. The only forbidden
techniques were eye-gouging and biting. This meant that practitioners
could use punches, kicks, wrestling holds, joint locks and choke holds, and
throws in any combination required to insure victory.
The ancient Greeks were famously well trained in the military use of
weapons as well. The Greek hoplite warrior received extensive instruction
in spear and short sword as well as shield work. History provides us with
the results of soldiers well trained in these arts both for single combat and
close-order drill. When the Hellenized Macedonian youth Alexander the
Great set out in the third century B.C. to conquer the world using im-
proved tactics and soldiers well trained in pankration and the use of
sword, shield, and long spear, he very nearly succeeded. Only a revolt
from his own soldiers and his final illness prevented him from moving
deeper into India and beyond. It would be reasonable to assume that
Alexander and his forces, which brought Greek civilization in the areas of
warfare, mathematics, architecture, sculpture, music, and cuisine through-
110 Europe