Misplaced Pages

Wrestling mythology

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Examples of wrestling in mythology

Wrestling bouts are described in some of the world's mythologies.

  • The Epic of Gilgamesh in Sumerian literature features its hero Gilgamesh establishing his credibility as a leader after wrestling Enkidu. Other sculptures and literature from ancient Mesopotamia show that wrestling was a popular activity.
  • The Iliad describes Aias and Odysseus wrestling against each other.
  • Cornish wrestling has a long history, with Geoffrey of Monmouth in Historia Regum Britanniae (c. 1139) describing Corineus, the legendary founder of Cornwall, as a man "of great courage and boldness, who, in an encounter with any person, even of gigantic stature, would immediately overthrow him, as if he were a child", and later tells the story of how Corineus wrestled a Cornish giant, Gogmagog or Goemagot upon the cliff top known as Lamm Goemagot.
  • Another early description of wrestling appears in the Hebrew Book of Genesis (32:22-32). The passage depicts the patriarch Jacob wrestling with the Angel, for which Jacob was subsequently renamed Israel. (Israel translates to "wrestles (or strives) with God".)
  • The Sanskrit epic Mahabharata describes the encounter between the accomplished wrestlers Bhima and Jarasandha; "grasping each other in various ways by means of their arms, and kicking each other with such violence as to affect the innermost nerves, they struck at each other's breasts with clenched fists. With bare arms as their only weapons roaring like clouds they grasped and struck each other like two mad elephants encountering each other with their trunks".
  • Thor wrestled against Elli.

Notes

  1. Narrated in Edda, by Snorre.

References

  1. "Wrestling, Freestyle" by Michael B. Poliakoff, in Encyclopedia of World Sport: From Ancient Times to the Present, Vol. 3, pp. 1189, 1193, eds. David Levinson and Karen Christensen (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, Inc., 1996).
  2. ^ Gyldendals store konversasjonsleksikon|Gyldendals store konversasjons-leksikon, 1972 (third edition), p.2563–4. ISBN 978-82-05-00267-8.
  3. Poliakoff, Clare; Poliakoff, Michael B. (Summer 1984), "Jacob, Job, and Other Wrestlers: Reception of Greek Athletics by Jews and Christians in Antiquity" (PDF), Journal of Sport History, 11 (2): 48–65, ISSN 0094-1700
  4. Vyasa, Krishna-Dwaipayana; Ganguli, Kisari Mohan (1883–1896), "Section XXIII", The Mahabharata, p. 51, retrieved 2007-10-08
Stub icon

This article related to the martial arts is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Stub icon

This mythology-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: