一段简短的泰拳的英语介绍RT

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  • Origins of Muay Thai(泰拳)

    Praying before the matchVarious forms of kickboxing have long been practiced throughout mainland Southeast Asia.Based on Chinese and Indian martial arts,[1practitioners claim they date back two thousand years.Cambodia,one of the most influential countries in Indochina,may have been instrumental in spreading the art across the region.In Thailand,Muay Thai evolved from muay boran (ancient boxing),an unarmed combat method which would probably have been used by Siamese soldiers after losing their weapons in battle.Some believe that the ancient Siamese military created Muay Thai from the weapon-based art of krabi krabong but others contend that the two were merely developed alongside each other.Krabi Krabong nevertheless was an important influence on Muay Thai as can be seen in several kicks,holds and the movements in the wai khru which have their origins in armed combat.

    Muay Boran,and therefore Muay Thai,was originally called dhoi muay or simply muay.As well as being a practical fighting technique for use in actual warfare,muay became a sport in which the opponents fought in front of spectators who went to watch for entertainment.These muay contests gradually became an integral part of local festivals and celebrations,especially those held at temples.It was even used as entertainment for kings.Eventually,the previously bare-fisted fighters started wearing lengths of hemp rope around their hands and forearms.This type of match was called muay kaad cheuk .

    Muay gradually became a possible means of personal advancement as the nobility increasingly esteemed skillful practitioners of the art and invited selected fighters to come to live in the royal palace to teach muay to the staff of the royal household,soldiers,princes or the king's personal guards.[citation needed] This "royal muay" was called muay luang (มวยหลวง).Some time during the Ayutthaya period,a platoon of royal guards was established,whose duty was to protect king and the country.They were known as Grom Nak Muay (Muay Fighters' Regiment).This royal patronage of muay continued through the reigns of Rama V and VII.