and to the point.” Pugnusderives from the Greek pugme,meaning “fist.”
Though boxing is mentioned in the ancient Hindu epic the Mahabharata,
the origins of the art traditionally have been traced to ancient Greece. Both
Homer and Virgil poeticize the art in their epics, and designs on ancient
Greek pottery feature boxers in action. In Greek mythology, the divine
boxer Pollux (also called Polydeuces), twin of Castor (with whom he
presided over public games such as the Olympics), was said to have sparred
with Hercules.
Ancient Greek and Roman pugilists developed the art of using the fists
to pummel their opponents while wearing leather thongs and binders,
known as himantesand sphairai, wrapped around the hands and wrists.
The Greeks also used the amphotidus,a protective helmet; Egyptian box-
ers are depicted wearing similar headgear. Originally used to protect the
wrists and fragile bones in the hands, the leather thongs (also known as
cesti) were twisted so as to inflict greater injury. By the fourth century B.C.,
the thongs were replaced with hardened leather gloves. The first famous
Greek boxer, Theagenes of Thaos, champion of the 450 B.C. Olympics, is
said to have won 1,406 battles with the cesti, killing most of his opponents.
In Roman times, the cestus was studded with metal, and the art was re-
duced to a gladiatorial spectacle.
The art of boxing in combat disappeared with the advent of heavy ar-
mor. Upon the introduction of the firearm—and the resulting obsolescence
of armor—the “noble science of self-defense” was reborn. James Figg, an
eighteenth-century British cudgel-fighter, swordsman, and the first modern
boxing champion, was the central figure in this renaissance. When he
opened his boxing school in London in 1719, the art of boxing had been
dormant for over a thousand years—since the fall of the Roman Empire.
Figg taught young aristocrats the art of self-defense by applying the pre-
cepts of modern fencing—footwork, speed, and the straight lunge—to
fisticuffs. Thus, Western fistfighters learned to throw straight punches, the
basis of modern boxing, from fencers. To some extent boxing replaced the
duel, allowing men of all social classes to defend themselves and their
honor without severely maiming or killing each other.
Despite this connection with fencing, boxing encounters during this
early modern era were largely unstructured and highly uncivilized. Boxers
fought bare-knuckle (without gloves), and wrestling, choking, throwing,
gouging, and purring (stomping on one’s opponent with spiked boots) were
commonplace. The art began to be refined when Figg’s successor, Jack
Broughton (the “Father of Boxing”), drafted the first set of rules in 1741
after killing an opponent in the ring. According to “Broughton’s Rules,” a
square was established in the center of the fighting ring (a circular border
of spectators) to which fighters were to return after a knockdown, which
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