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{{Short description|Fighting systems of the Indian subcontinent}}
The ] is home to a variety of ''']''', including ], ], ] and ].
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2019}}
{{Use Indian English|date=October 2014}}
'''Indian martial arts''' refers to the ] of the ]. A variety of terms are used for the English phrases "Indian martial arts", deriving from ancient sources. While they may seem to imply specific disciplines (e.g. archery, armed combat), by Classical times they were used generically for all fighting systems.


Among the most common terms today, '']'', is a compound of the words ''{{IAST|śastra}}'' (weapon) and ''{{IAST|vidyā}}'' (knowledge).<ref>attested in ] only, specifically in the ].</ref> ''Dhanurveda'' derives from the words for bow (''{{IAST|dhanushya}}'') and knowledge (''{{IAST|veda}}''), the "science of archery" in ] literature, later applied to martial arts in general.<ref>attested from ]; see {{cite book |last=Luijendijk |first=D.H. |title=Kalarippayat: The Essence and Structure of an Indian Martial Art |year=2008 |publisher=Oprat (LuLu.com) |isbn=978-1-58160-480-1}}{{self-published source|date=June 2022}}</ref>{{self-published inline|date=February 2020}} The ] text describes dhanuveda as one of the traditional eighteen branches of "applied knowledge" or ], along with ''shastrashāstra'' or ].<ref name=Zarrilli1>{{cite web|url=https://spa.exeter.ac.uk/drama/staff/kalari/power.html |title=Actualizing Power and Crafting a Self in Kalarippayattu |publisher=Spa.ex.ac.uk |access-date=27 September 2015}}</ref> A later term, ''yuddha kalā'', comes from the words ''yuddha'' meaning fight or combat and ''kalā'' meaning art or skill. The related term ''śastra kalā'' (lit. weapon art) usually refers specifically to armed disciplines. Another term, ''yuddha-vidyā'' or "combat knowledge", refers to the skills used on the battlefield, encompassing not only actual fighting but also battle formations and strategy. Martial arts are usually learnt and practiced in the traditional ]s.<ref name="Lochtefeld2002">{{cite book|author=James G. Lochtefeld|title=The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: A-M|url=https://archive.org/details/illustratedencyc0000loch/page/23|url-access=registration|year=2002|publisher=The Rosen Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-8239-3179-8|pages=}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hRjC5IaJ2zcC&pg=PA315|title=Rise and Fall of the Imperial Guptas|last=Agrawal|first=Ashvini|date=1989|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass|isbn=9788120805927|language=en}}</ref>
==Introduction==
] (Ancient Northern India)<ref>{{cite book | last = Sastri | first = K.A. Nilakanta | year = 1970 | title = Advanced History of India | publisher = Allied Publishers | location = Bombay | pages = 3, 10, 50, 67-71, 80, 132, 138, 142, 310, 316}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Sastri | first = K.A. Nilakanta | year = 1967 | title = Age of the Nandas & Mauryas | publisher = Motilal Banarsidass | location = Delhi | pages = 171-182, 248}}</ref> and ] (Ancient Southern India) <ref>{{cite book | last = Pillai | first = V. Kanakasabhai | year = 1997 | title = The Tamils Eighteen Hundred Years Ago | publisher = Asian Educational Services | location = Delhi; Madras | pages = 2, 10 – 39, 102, 105, 106, 113, 116, 121, 138, 194}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Ramaswamy | first = Sumathi | year = 2004 | title = The Lost Land of Lemuria: Fabulous Geographies, Catastrophic Histories | publisher = University of California Press | location = Berkeley; London | pages = 107-109, 176}}</ref>was one of the centres of several martial traditions and practices until it became a unified ] during the time of British rule around the 1700s. Some of the older traditions include organised martial systems as practiced by the ] caste of ], which are some of the oldest descriptions of organised martial practices documented in the ], these systems include armed and unarmed combat and aspects such as meditation, conditioning, horse riding etc. Some of the older traditions include organised martial systems as practiced by the ] caste of ], which are some of the oldest descriptions of organised martial practices documented in the ], these systems include armed and unarmed combat and aspects such as meditation, conditioning, horse riding etc.
] is worshipped by wrestlers in India]]
Organised martial arts in India include the ancient martial art of ] (more commonly known as ''Mallayuddha''), which is described in the Indian epics as the fighting style of warriors such as ]. The art is supposed to have gained maximum prominence in ] at the time when the oral tradition of the ] epic was concieved, the ] was compiled in textual form during the 5th century BC, the epic's setting has a historical precedent in ], where the ] kingdom was the center of political power in the late ] and early ] millennia BCE. It is believed that mallayuddha was regarded as a prominent martial art in that era.
] fighting in Kalarippayattu.]]
Martial arts of the ] are diverse in nature and have origins of different times from various different ethnic groups. A number of ancient and sophisticated ] martial arts were developed in ], including ] (empty hand combat), ] (the art of vital points) and ] (kickboxing) in ], and ] (way of the arena) in ].


==History==
==Influence of Indian martial arts==
{{Further|Military history of India|Origins of Asian martial arts}}


===Antiquity (pre-Gupta)===
Some organizations believe that India is the origin of their martial arts, such as ].
An Indus valley civilization seal shows two men spearing one another in a duel which seem to be centered on a woman. A statue of a spear thrower was also excavated from an Indus valley site.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DK3tAAAAMAAJ|title=Ancient Cities of the Indus Valley Civilization|last=Kenoyer|first=Jonathan M.|date=1998|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=9780195779400|language=en}}</ref>


''Dhanurveda'', a section found in the ] (1500 BCE - 1100 BCE) contains references to martial arts.<ref name="auto">{{cite book|title=Psychophysical Acting: An Intercultural Approach After Stanislavski|page=66|publisher=Routledge|author1=Phillip B. Zarrilli |author2=Peter Hulton }}</ref><ref name="auto1">{{cite book|title=Encyclopedia of Hinduism|page=182|author1=Denise Cush |author2=Catherine A. Robinson |author3=Michael York |publisher=Psychology press}}</ref> ] contain the earliest accounts of combat, both armed and bare-handed. Most deities of the Hindu-Buddhist pantheon are armed with their own personal weapon, and are revered not only as master martial artists but often as originators of those systems themselves.<ref name="AG">{{cite journal |last=George |first=Robinn |date=2010 |title=India's insistent intensity |journal=Asian Geographic}}</ref> The '']'' tells of fighters armed only with daggers besting lions, and describes a prolonged battle between ] and ] using bows, swords, trees, rocks and fists.<ref name="Zarrilli1" /> Another unarmed battle in the Mahabharata describes two combatants boxing with clenched fists and fighting with kicks, finger strikes, knee strikes and headbutts.<ref>, Book 4: ''Virata Parva'', '']''.</ref>
Legend holds that ] was the third child of the Pallava king Sugandan from ], ]. He trained in breathing exercises and combat. Bodhidarma also studied ] and became the 28th patriarch of that religion.


The oldest recorded organized unarmed fighting art in the Indian subcontinent is ] or combat-wrestling, codified into four forms in the ]. Stories describing ] report that he sometimes engaged in wrestling matches where he used knee strikes to the chest, punches to the head, hair pulling, and strangleholds.<ref name="Svinth" /> Based on such accounts, Svinth (2002) traces press-ups and squats used by Indian wrestlers to the pre-classical era.<ref name="Svinth" />
Following the death of his master, Bodhidharma travelled to China to spread buddhism. After appearing in the court of emperor Wu-Di of the Liang dynasty, he settled down in the ], in the province of ] (northern China), where he is said to have installed many martial practices leadin to the development of ] such as ]. In the monastery, Bodhidharma lived for 9 years and is also credited for the development of ].
] print by ], ].]]


In Sanskrit literature the term ''dwandwayuddha'' referred to a duel, such that it was a battle between only two warriors and not armies. Epics often describe the duels between deities and god-like heroes as lasting a month or more. The ] (wrestling match) between ] and ] lasts 27 days. Similarly, the ''dwandayuddha'' between ] and ] lasts for 30 days, while that between ] and ] lasts for 28 days. Likewise, the ''dwandwayudda'' between ] and Dundubhi, a demon in the form of a ], lasts for 45 days. The ] tells that if a warrior's topknot comes loose during such a fight or duel, the opponent must give him time to bind his hair before continuing.


The ''Charanavyuha'' authored by ] mentions four ''upaveda'' (applied Vedas). Included among them are archery (''dhanurveda'') and military sciences (''shastrashastra''),<ref name="auto"/><ref name="auto1"/> the mastery of which was the duty (''dharma'') of the warrior class. Kings usually belonged to the ] (warrior) class and thus served as heads of the army. They typically practiced archery, wrestling, boxing, and swordsmanship as part of their education.<ref>{{cite book |title=Daily Life in Ancient India |author=Jeanine Auboyer |year=1965 |pages= |publisher=Phoenix Press |location=France |isbn=1-84212-591-5 |url=https://archive.org/details/dailylifeinancie0000aubo/page/58 }}</ref> Examples include such rulers as ] and ]. The Chinese monk ] writes that the emperor ] was light on his feet despite his advancing age and managed to dodge and seize an assailant during an assassination attempt.<ref name=Xuanzang/>
However, the claim that the martial arts of China and Japan come from India is disputed. Noteworthy martial artists, such as Charles C. Goodin,<ref>"When I studied Kenpo Karate in Hawaii during the mid 1970's, we were taught that Bodhidharma traveled from India to China in 525 A.D. to teach the true meaning of Buddhism to Emperor Wu (Wu-ti). Upon arriving in China, he found that the priests and peasants were being attacked by armed bandits. He meditated on the situation and told the people that fighting and killing are wrong. However, a person must be able to defend himself. Thus, he taught them Go Shin Jitsu Kenpo Karate (or Shorinjiryu Kenpo), an unarmed system of self-defense in which the hands and feet became weapons."</ref> Chojun Miyagi,<ref>"I would like to tell you my private opinion regarding, of course, karate as follows. I have heard that it is not sure but there is a martial art called "Three Hand" in India. I don't know the original Indian name. "Three Hand" is the direct translation of Chinese language from Indian language. I suppose maybe such a martial art was brought to China from India by Darma during the Emperor Wu dynasty, and it became the origin of Shaolin Temple."</ref> Cezar Borkowski & Marion Manzo,<ref>{{cite book | last = Borkowski | first = Cezar | coauthors = Manzo, Marion | title = The Complete Idiot's Guide to Martial Arts | year = 1999 | publisher = Alpha Books | location = Indianapolis | id = ISBN 0-02-862947-7 | pages = 20 | quote =Two of India's most well-received exports—its religions and martial arts—were enthusiastically embraced in other parts of Asia.}}</ref> Hidetaka Nishiyama & Richard C. Brown and ] have credited Bodhidharma, while specialists in martial arts history such as Tang Hao,<ref>{{cite book | author = Tang Hao 唐豪 | title = Shàolín Wǔdāng kǎo 少林武當考 | origyear = 1930 | year = 1968 | publisher = Qílín tushu | location = Hong Kong 香港 | language = Chinese}}</ref> Matsuda Ryuchi<ref>{{cite book | author = Matsuda Ryuchi 松田隆智 | authorlink = Ryuchi Matsuda | title = Zhōngguó wǔshù shǐlüè 中國武術史略 | year = 1986 | publisher = Danqing tushu | location = Taipei 臺北 | language = Chinese}}</ref> and Stanley Henning<ref>{{cite journal | first = Stanley E. | last = Henning | year = 1981 | month = December | title = The Chinese Martial Arts in Historical Perspective | journal = Military Affairs | volume = 45 | issue = 4 | pages = 173–179 | id = ISSN 00263931}} "Eventually, possibly as early as the middle of the Qing period, boxing manuals began to refer to Shaolin Monastery as Chinese boxing's place of origin.…By the close of the nineteenth century, these stories had been stretched to claim that the Indian monk, Bodhidharma, had introduced boxing to Shaolin Monastery around 525 A.D.…None of these alleged contributions can be historically verified. Finally, in 1915, a book by an unknown author titled ''Secrets of Shaolin Boxing'' was published, which wove together all these groundless stories…its pernicious influence has permeated literature on the subject to this day."</ref><ref>{{cite journal | author = Henning, Stanley | year = 1994 | month = Autumn/Winter | title = Ignorance, Legend and Taijiquan | journal = Journal of the Chenstyle Taijiquan Research Association of Hawaii | volume = 2 | issue = 3 | pages = 1–7 | url = http://www.nardis.com/~twchan/henning.html}} 'While Shaolin was the ideal symbol to represent the more numerous, popular styles of boxing, this gave rise to serious misunderstandings and, as a result, later works, beginning with Zhang Kongzhao's boxing manual (1784), attributed the origins of Chinese boxing to Shaolin Monastery, (there is no mention of Bodhidharma until much later - c. 1900).…Why does there appear to be such concern to associate Taijiquan with the Zhang Sanfeng legend between 1912 and 1921, over 60 years after the style of boxing practiced in Chenjiagou village had been given the name "Taijiquan" and exposed to the big city? The answer may lie in a combination of events which began with the earliest reference to "The Dharma" or Bodhidharma as the originator of Shaolin boxing in a widely popular novel, ''The Travels of Lao Ts'an'' first published in ''Illustrated Fiction Magazine'' between 1904-1907. This was soon followed by a book titled ''Shaolin School Methods'', which appeared as a series in a Shanghai newspaper in 1910. This book, of unknown origin but written in an anti-Manchu secret society tone, expanded on the Bodhidharma story and, in 1915, was altered further and published as ''Secrets of Shaolin Boxing'' under the pseudonym, Master of the Study of Self Respect (probably an allusion to anti-Manchu and anti-imperialist feelings).'</ref> have rejected the claims. Moreover, the existence of martial arts in China prior to the purported arrival of Bodhidharma is documented in the ''Bibliographies in the Book of the Han Dynasty'', the ''Spring and Autumn Annals of Wu and Yue'' and even at the Shaolin temple in the ''Taishō Tripiṭaka''.


Many of the popular sports mentioned in the ] and the epics have their origins in military training, such as boxing ('']''), wrestling (''maladwandwa''), chariot-racing (''rathachalan''), horse-riding (''aswa-rohana'') and archery (''dhanurvidya'').<ref name="Timechart">{{cite book |title=The Timechart History of India |year=2005 |publisher=Robert Frederick Ltd. |isbn=0-7554-5162-7}}</ref> Competitions were held not just as a contest of the players' prowess but also as a means of finding a bridegroom. ], ] and ] all won their consorts in such tournaments.
Bodhidharma has also been mentioned in articles by news organisations such as the ].<ref>{{cite news | first=Christopher | last=Wren | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=9B06E7D71338F932A2575AC0A965948260 | title=Of Monks and Martial Arts | work=The New York Times | publisher=The New York Times Company | date=1983-09-11 | accessdate=2006-08-30}}<br>"The introduction of fighting skills at Shaolin Monastery has been attributed in legend to the Indian monk Bodhidharma, who went to the monastery in 527, three decades after it was founded by Batuo, another Indian monk.…Actually, the ancient martial arts probably originated even earlier as Buddhist monks learned to fend off brigands and other predators."</ref><ref>{{cite news | first=Howard W. | last=French | url=http://travel2.nytimes.com/2005/02/10/international/asia/10shaolin.html?ex=1157083200&en=0d65a47c8d53a4e9&ei=5070 | title=So Many Paths. Which Shaolin Is Real? The Reply: Yes. | work=The New York Times | publisher=The New York Times Company | date=2005-02-10 | accessdate=2006-08-30}}<br>"A Buddhist monk from India named Bodhidharma, or Damo, settled here then and began instructing local monks in scripture and the physical drills that are still said to be the basis of kung fu."</ref><ref>{{cite news | first=Michael | last=Brenson | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE3DD1431F930A35752C0A960948260 | title= Art: 'Kernels of Energy,' How Chinese See Rocks | work=The New York Times | publisher=The New York Times Company | date=1986-01-03 | accessdate=2006-08-30}}<br>"From all this, it is also easy to see why there may have been rock cults in Chinese culture; why the sixth-century Indian monk Bodhidharma, later considered the first patriarch of Chan Buddhism, apparently spent nine years meditating upon a rock; why caves and cliffs had such sacred meaning, and why some reknowned Chinese scholars, from the Middle Ages on, have been known as petrophiles. Because of his obsession with rocks, the Emperor Huizong was called a ''petromaniac.''"</ref><ref>{{cite news | first=Pete | last=Hessler | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=990DE3D61039F93BA25756C0A961958260 | title= Drinking Up Life In a Chinese Teahouse | work=The New York Times | publisher=The New York Times Company | date=1997-05-18 | accessdate=2006-08-30}}</ref>


In the 3rd century, elements from the ], as well as finger movements in the ''nata'' dances, were incorporated into the fighting arts.<ref name=Svinth>{{cite web|author=Kim Taylor |url=http://ejmas.com/kronos |title=Kronos: A Chronological History of the Martial Arts and Combative Sports |publisher=Ejmas.com |access-date=27 September 2015}}</ref> A number of Indian fighting styles remain closely connected to ], dance and performing arts. Some of the choreographed sparring in kalaripayat can be applied to dance<ref name="Zarrilli1998">{{cite book |last=Zarrilli |first=Phillip B. |title=When the Body Becomes All Eyes: Paradigms, Discourses and Practices of Power in Kalarippayattu, a South Indian Martial Art |year=1998 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford}}</ref> and ] dancers who knew ] were believed to be markedly better than other performers. Until recent decades, the ] was performed only by martial artists. Some traditional Indian classical dance schools still incorporate martial arts as part of their exercise regimen.<ref name="Luijendijk 08">Luijendijk 2008</ref>
India has influenced the martial arts of the ]s.


Written evidence of martial arts in Southern India dates back to the ] of about the 2nd century BC to the 2nd century AD. The ] and ] describe the use of spears, swords, shields, bows and ] in the Sangam era. The word ] appears in the ''Puram'' (verses 225, 237, 245, 356) and ''Akam'' (verses 34, 231, 293) to describe both a battlefield and combat arena. The word ''kalari tatt'' denoted a martial feat, while ''kalari kozhai'' meant a coward in war.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090829143736/http://www.palmlandtours.net/kerala/tours/kalari/kalaripayatte/kalari.htm|date=29 August 2009}}</ref> Each warrior in the Sangam era received regular military training<ref>Subramanian, N. (1966). ''Sangam polity''. Bombay: Asian Publishing House.</ref> in target practice and horse riding. They specialized in one or more of the important weapons of the period including the spear (''vel''), sword (''val''), shield (''kedaham''), and bow and arrow (''vil ambu''). The combat techniques of the Sangam period were the earliest precursors to ].<ref name="Zarrilli1"/> References to "Silappadikkaram" in Sangam literature date back to the 2nd century. This referred to the ] staff which was in great demand with foreign visitors.<ref name=Raj>{{cite book |last=Raj|first=J. David Manuel |title=The Origin and the Historical Development of Silambam Fencing: An Ancient Self-Defence Sport of India |year=1977 |publisher=College of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, Univ. of Oregon |location=Oregon |pages=44, 50, & 83}}</ref><ref name=Sports>{{cite book |last=Sports Authority of India|title=Indigenous Games and Martial Arts of India |year=1987 |publisher=Sports Authority of India |location=New Delhi|pages=91 & 94}}</ref>
== Indian martial arts under colonialism ==


The ten fighting styles of northern sastra-vidya were said to have been created in different areas based on animals and gods, and designed for the particular geography of their origin.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} Tradition ascribes their convergence to the 6th-century university of ],{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} ancient India's intellectual capital. Located in present-day Panjab, Pakistan, the Ramayana ascribes the city's founding to ] who named it after his son Taksha. From the 7th to the 5th centuries BC it was held in high regard as a great centre of trade and learning,<ref name=Keay/> attracting students from throughout present-day Pakistan and northern India. Among the subjects taught were the "military sciences", and archery was one of its prime arts.
Indian martial arts declined as Western colonialism disrupted the livelihoods of India's martial castes.


Some measures were put into place to discourage martial activity during the Buddhist period. The ] in particular forbids wrestling, boxing, archery, and swordsmanship. However, references to fighting arts are found in early ], such as the ] (c. 1st century AD) which refers to a boxing art while speaking to ].<ref name=Haines>Bruce A. Haines (1995). ''Karate's History and Traditions'' (p. 23-25). Tuttle Publishing. {{ISBN|0-8048-1947-5}}.</ref> It also categorised combat techniques as joint locks, fist strikes, grapples and throws. The ] makes further mention of a ] with dance-like movements called ''Nara''. Another ] ] called ''Hongyo-kyo'' (佛本行集經) describes a "strength contest" between Gautama Buddha's half-brother ] and his cousin ].<ref name=Haines/> Siddhartha Gautama himself was a champion wrestler and swordsman before becoming the ].<ref name=Svinth/>
]s who sought service with rulers as their ancestors had done found their sources of patronage limited by British restrictions; unable to find employment in their traditional line of work, some joined the ].<ref>{{cite book | last = Bayly | first = C.A. | title = Indian Society and the making of the British Empire | origyear = 1988 | edition = Sixth printing | year = 2002 | publisher = Cambridge University Press | location = Cambridge | id = ISBN 0521386500 | pages = 103}}</ref>


===Classical period (3rd to 10th centuries)===
Kalarippayattu underwent a period of decline after the introduction of firearms and especially after the full establishment of British colonial rule in the 19th century.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Zarrilli, P. | year = 1992 | title = To heal and/or harm: The vital spots (marmmam/varmam) in two south Indian martial traditions--Part I: Focus on Kerala's kalarippayattu | journal = Journal of Asian Martial Arts | volume = 1 | issue = 1 }}</ref>
Like other branches of ], treatises on martial arts become more systematic in the course of the 1st millennium AD. ], an armed grappling style, is mentioned in sources of the early centuries AD.<ref name=Haines/> Around this time, ] philosophers developed important metaphysical concepts such as ], ], and ].<ref name=Svinth/>


The '']'' (c. 4th century) identifies 108 vital points on the human body<ref>G. D. Singhal, L. V. Guru (1973). ''Anatomical and Obstetrical Considerations in Ancient Indian Surgery Based on Sarira-Sthana of Susruta Samhita''.</ref> of which 64 were classified as being lethal if properly struck with a fist or stick.<ref name=Svinth/> ]'s work formed the basis of the medical discipline ] which was taught alongside various martial arts.<ref name=Svinth/> With numerous other scattered references to vital points in Vedic and epic sources, it is certain that ]'s early fighters knew and practised attacking or defending vital points.<ref name=Zarrilli1992>{{cite journal |author=Zarrilli, Phillip B. |year=1992 |title= To Heal and/or To Harm: The Vital Spots (Marmmam/Varmam) in Two South Indian Martial Traditions Part I: Focus on Kerala's Kalarippayattu |url=https://spa.exeter.ac.uk/drama/staff/kalari/healharm.html|journal=Journal of Asian Martial Arts |volume=1 |issue=1 }}</ref>
More European modes of organizing police, armies and governmental institutions, and the increasing use of firearms, gradually eroded the need for traditional martial training associated with caste-specific duties.<ref>{{cite book | last = Zarrilli | first = Phillip B. | title = When the Body Becomes All Eyes: Paradigms, Discourses and Practices of Power in Kalarippayattu, a South Indian Martial Art | year = 1998 | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = Oxford}}</ref>


Around 630, King ] of the ] commissioned dozens of granite sculptures showing unarmed fighters disarming armed opponents. This is similar to the style described in the ''Agni Purana''.<ref name=Svinth/>
The ] banned kalarippayattu in 1804 in response to a series of revolts.<ref>{{cite book | last = Luijendijk | first = D.H. | title = Kalarippayat: India's Ancient Martial Art | url = http://www.martialartssupermarket.com/index.cfm?action=showProd&subid=1083 | year = 2005 | publisher = Paladin Press | location = Boulder | id = ISBN 1581604807}}</ref>


Martial arts were not exclusive to the ] caste, though the warrior class used them more extensively. The 8th-century text ''Kuvalaymala'' by Udyotanasuri recorded fighting techniques being taught at educational institutions, where non-kshatriya students from throughout the subcontinent "were learning and practicing archery, fighting with sword and shield, with daggers, sticks, lances, and with fists, and in duels (''niyuddham'')".<ref name=Zarrilli1/> Hindu priests of the traditional ] still teach unarmed fighting techniques to their students as a way of increasing stamina and training the physical body{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}.
The resurgence of public interest in kalarippayattu began in the 1920s in Tellicherry as part of a wave of rediscovery of the traditional arts throughout South India which characterized the growing reaction against British colonial rule.<ref>Zarrilli 1998</ref>


The ] came into power during the 7th century and founded a kshatriya dynasty in northern India which exceeded the preceding Gupta Empire. During this period, Emperor Nagabhata I (750–780 AD) and Mihir Bhoja I (836–890) commissioned various texts on martial arts, and were themselves practitioners of these systems. ''Shiva Dhanuveda'' was composed in this era. The ''khadga'', a two-handed broad-tipped heavy longsword, was given special preference. It was even used for ''khadga-puja'', ritualised worship of the sword. The Gurjara-Pratiharas continuously fought off Arab invasions, particularly during the ]. The Arab chronicler Sulaiman wrote of the Gurjara ruler as the greatest foe to Islamic expansion, while at the same time praising his cavalry.<ref>{{cite book
== Various Indian martial arts ==
| title =History of Ancient India: Earliest Times to 1000 A. D.
* ] (Kickboxing)
| author = Radhey Shyam Chaurasia
* ]
| publisher =Atlantic Publishers & Distributors
* ]
| year =2002
* ]
| page =207
* ]
| isbn = 81-269-0027-X
* ]
}}</ref>
* ]
* ] (Way of the Arena) ]
* ] (Empty Hand Combat)
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ] (The Art of Vital Points)
* ] (Diamond Fist)


===Middle Ages (11th to 15th centuries)===
==Indian martial arts in popular culture==
] ]]
*], a popular charecter from the ] series practices a martial form of ] as his fighting style.
] had developed into its present form by the 11th century, during an extended period of warfare between the ] and ] dynasties.<ref name=Svinth/><ref name="Zarrilli1998"/> The earliest treatise discussing the techniques of malla-yuddha is the ''Malla Purana'' (c. 13th century), unlike the earlier ''Manasollasa'' which gives the names of movements but no descriptions.<ref>{{cite book |last=Alter |first=Joseph S. |title=The Wrestler's Body: Identity and Ideology in North India |date=August 1992b |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley}}</ref>
]

*In the ] '']'', Gama appears as the mentor of Joachim Valentine, one of the characters who joins the player's party. Throughout the game, Joachim can challenge Gama to one-on-one matches in order to learn new wrestling moves.
Over a period of several centuries, invading Muslim armies managed to occupy much of present-day Pakistan and northern India. In response to the spread of Muslim rule,<ref name="Kannadaempire">Historians such as ] (''History of Vijayanagar Empire'', 1936), ] (''The Aravidu Dynasty of Vijayanagara'', 1927), ] (''Social and Political Life in the Vijayanagara Empire'', 1930), G.S. Gai (Archaeological Survey of India), William Coelho (''The Hoysala Vamsa'', 1955) and Kamath (Kamath 2001, pp157–160)</ref> the kingdoms of ] united in the 14th century to found the ]. Physical culture was given much attention by both royalty and commoners in the empire, with wrestling being particularly popular with both men and women.<ref name=Kamath>{{cite book |author=Suryanath U. Kamath |title=A concise history of Karnataka: from pre-historic times to the present|orig-year=1980|year= 2001|publisher= Jupiter Books|location= Bangalore}}</ref> Gymnasiums have been discovered inside royal quarters of Vijayanagara, and records speak of regular physical training for commanders and their armies during peacetime.<ref>{{cite book |last= Nilakanta Sastri|first= K.A.|title= A history of South India from prehistoric times to the fall of Vijayanagar|orig-year=1955|year=2002|publisher= Indian Branch, Oxford University Press|location= New Delhi|isbn= 0-19-560686-8}}</ref> Royal palaces and market places had special arenas where royalty and common people alike amused themselves by watching matches such as cockfights, ram fights, and wrestling. One account describes an ] in ] where noblemen practiced jumping exercises, ], fencing and ] almost every day before dinner to maintain their health, and observed that "men as old as seventy years look only thirty".<ref>{{cite book |title= The Aravidu Dynasty of Vijayanagara |url= https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.282973 |author=Henry Heras |year=1927 |location=Madras|author-link= Henry Heras }}</ref>
*In the '']'' video game series, character ] is modelled after ].

*The classic martial arts film ] depicts a silent Indian fighter using a yoga based fighting style and having an unnatural ability to extend his limbs to attack.
The Italian traveller ] wrote of cane-fighting in southern India. According to Pietro, it was the custom for soldiers to specialise in their own particular weapon of expertise and never use any other even during war, "thereby becoming very expert and well practised in that which he takes to".<ref>{{cite book |title= Pietro Della Valle – The Travels |author=Edward Grey |year=1892}}</ref>

As their ancient predecessors, swordplay and wrestling were commonly practiced by the royalty of Vijayanagara. ] is said to have arranged a duel between a champion swordsman and the prince of ] who was known for being an expert with both the sword and dagger. The prince accepted the challenge until he learned he would be fighting one not of royal blood and so killed himself rather than having to "soil his hands". ] and the Persian envoy Adbur Razzak relate that ] survived an assassination attempt "as he was a man who knew how to use both sword and dagger better than anyone in his kingdom, avoided by twists and turns of his body the thrusts aimed at him, freed himself from him, and slew him with a short sword that he had".<ref>{{cite book | title=A Forgotten Empire (Vijayanagar): A Contribution to the History of India |author=Robert Sewell |year=1924}}</ref>

===Mughal era (1526–1857)===
]
{{Further|Mughal weapons|Mughal army|Pehlwani}}

After a series of victories, the ]n conqueror ] established ] in north India during the 16th century. The Mughals were patrons of India's native arts, not only recruiting akhara-trained Rajput fighters for their armies but even practicing these systems themselves.<ref>For instance, the ] tells that Emperor ] practiced ] every day</ref> The ''Ausanasa Dhanurveda Sankalanam'' dates to the late 16th century, compiled under the patronage of ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bogenloewe.de/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=1269&language=en|title= Dhanurveda: The knowledge of the bow|author=Wiethase, H|website=bogenloewe|access-date=24 June 2014}}</ref> The '']'' tells that the Mughal court had various kinds of fighting men from around the ] who would demonstrate their skills every day in exchange for rewards. Among them were said to be both native and ], slingers from ], Hindustani athletes, ], stone-throwers and many others.

<blockquote>"There are several kinds of gladiators, each performing astonishing feats. In fighting they show much speed and agility and blend courage and skill in squatting down and rising up again. Some of them use shields in fighting, others use cudgels. Others again use no means of defence, and fight with one hand only; these are called ''ek-hath''. Those who come from the eastern districts of Hindostan use a small shield called "''chirwah''". Those from the southern provinces have shields of such magnitude as to cover a man and a horse. This kind of shield is called ''tilwah''. Another class use a shield somewhat less than the height of a man. Some again use a long sword, and seizing it with both hands they perform extraordinary feats of skill. There is another famous class called Bankúlis. They have no shield but make use of a peculiar kind of sword which, though curved towards the point, is straight near the handle. They wield it with great dexterity. The skill that they exhibit passes all description. Others are skillful in fighting with daggers and knives of various forms; of these there are upwards of a hundred thousand. Each class has a different name; they also differ in their performances. At court, there are a thousand gladiators always in readiness."<ref>{{cite book |title=The Ain I Akbari of Abul Fazl 'Allami |year=1993 |publisher=Gorgias Press}}</ref></blockquote>

Avid hunters, a popular sport among the Mughals was ''shikar'' or tiger-hunting. While often done with arrows and later even rifles, it was considered most impressive to kill a tiger with a hand-to-hand weapon such as a sword or dagger.<ref name=Capwell>{{cite book |title=The World Encyclopedia Of Knives, Daggers And Bayonets |author= Tobias Capwell |author-link=Tobias Capwell |year=2009 |publisher=Anness Publishing}}</ref> A warrior who managed to best a tiger would be awarded the title of ''Pachmar''.

In the 16th century, ] of Bengal organised a section of the Naga tradition of armed ] in order to protect Hindus from the intolerant Mughal rulers. Although generally said to abide by the principle of non-violence (''ahimsā''), these Dashanami monks had long been forming ] for the practice of both ] and martial arts. Such warrior-ascetics have been recorded from 1500 to as late as the 18th century,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://dspace.wbpublibnet.gov.in:8080/jspui/bitstream/10689/9526/5/Chapter%201_1%20-%20108p.pdf|title= A history of Dasnami Naga Sanyasis, Sir Jadunath Sarkar, Sri Panchayati Akhara Mahanirvani, Allahabad|publisher=Dspace.wbpublibnet.gov.in|access-date=27 September 2015}}</ref> although tradition attributes their creation to the 8th-century philosopher ]. They began as a stratum of ] warriors who would gather after harvest and arm peasants into militarised units, effectively acting as a self-defense squad. Prevalent in ], ] and ], they would give up their occupations and leave their families to live as mercenaries. Naga sadhu today rarely practice any form of fighting other than wrestling, but still carry ], swords, canes and spears. To this day their retreats are called ''chhauni'' or armed camps, and they have been known to hold mock jousts among themselves. As recently as the 1950s, it was not unusual for Naga sadhu to strike to kill someone over issues of honour.<ref group=web>{{cite web|url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/allahabad/Nagas-Once-were-warriors/articleshow/18026313.cms|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203034440/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-01-15/allahabad/36352194_1_naga-sadhu-akharas-hindus|url-status=live|archive-date=3 December 2013|work=]|title=Nagas: Once were warriors|access-date=10 March 2015}}</ref>

There is also a 17th-century ''Dhanurveda-samhita'' attributed to ].

The ] style of wrestling developed in the ] by combining native ] with influences from Persian '']''.<ref name=Alter1992a/><ref name=Alter1992b/>

===Maratha dynasty (1674–1859)===
], the warrior-king who brought the Maratha people and fighting style to prominence.]]
Coming from a hilly region characterized by valleys and caves, the ]s became expert horsemen who favoured light armour and highly mobile cavalry units during war. Known especially as masters of swords and spears, their heavily martial culture and propensity for the lance is mentioned as early as the 7th century by ].<ref name=Xuanzang>Destruction of Maharashtra and the Marathas in the first half of seventh-century "Travels of Hsuen Tsang," Vol. IV, Samual Beal, P, 449.</ref> After serving the Dakshin sultanates of the early 17th century, the scattered Marathas united to found their own kingdom under the warrior ]. Having learned the native art of ]a from a young age, Shivaji was a master swordsman and proficient in the use of various weapons.<ref>{{cite book |title=Medieval India |author=K. L. Khurana |year=1993 |publisher=Lakshmi Narain Agarwal |location=] |isbn=81-85778-15-9}}</ref> He took advantage of his people's expertise in guerilla tactics (''Shiva sutra'') to re-establish ''Hindavi Swarajya'' (native self-rule) at a time of Muslim supremacy and increasing intolerance.<ref name=Keay>{{cite book |title=India: A History |author=John Keay |year=2000 |publisher=HarperCollins |location=] |isbn=0-00-255717-7}}</ref> Utilizing speed, focused surprise attacks (typically at night and in rocky terrain), and the geography of ], ], & ]; the Maratha rulers were successfully able to defend their territory from the more numerous and heavily armed Mughals.<ref>A History of Warfare: Field-Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, William Morrow & Co; 1st edition (January 1983), {{ISBN|978-0688016456}}</ref> The still-existing ] is one of the "oldest and most renowned" regiments of the Indian Army, tracing its origins to 1768.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IZux-2ZPoaIC&pg=PA86|title=The Gaysh|access-date=10 March 2015|isbn=9781874622963|last1=Edwards|first1=Frank|year=2004|publisher=Helion & Company Limited }}</ref>

===Modern period (1857—present)===
Indian martial arts underwent a period of decline after the full establishment of British colonial rule in the 19th century.<ref name=Zarrilli1992/> More European modes of organizing kings, armies and governmental institutions, and the increasing use of firearms, gradually eroded the need for traditional combat training associated with caste-specific duties.<ref name=Zarrilli1998/> The British colonial government banned ] in 1804 in response to a series of revolts.<ref>{{cite book |last=Luijendijk |first=D.H. |title=Kalarippayat: India's Ancient Martial Art |year=2005 |publisher=Paladin Press |location=Boulder |isbn=1-58160-480-7}}</ref> ] was also banned and became more common in the ] than its native Tamil Nadu. Nevertheless, traditional fighting systems persisted, sometimes even under the patronage of enthusiastic British spectators who tended to remark on the violence of native boxing and the acrobatic movements characteristic of Indian fighting styles.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}

The British took advantage of communities with a heavily militaristic culture, characterising them as "]" and employing them in the armed forces. Sikhs – already known among Indians for their martial practices – were particularly valued by the colonists as soldiers and guards, and were posted throughout not only India but Southeast Asia and other parts of the British Empire{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. Members of the army were allowed to box as a way of settling disputes, provided that they were still able to carry out their duties as soldiers after a match.<ref>{{cite journal |title=The Saturday Magazine|author1=Runjeet Singh |author2=Chief of Lahore |date=June 1838 |issue=248}}</ref> The particular form of boxing used by the Punjabi soldiers was ''loh-musti'',{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} as the ] worn by Sikhs could be wielded like ].

The resurgence of public interest in ] began in the 1920s in Tellicherry as part of a wave of rediscovery of the traditional arts throughout ] which characterised the growing reaction against British colonial rule.<ref name=Zarrilli1998/> During the following three decades, other regional styles were subsequently revived such as ] in Tamil Nadu, ] in Manipur<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sports.indiapress.org/thang_ta.php|title=Martial Arts in India|access-date=10 March 2015}}</ref> and ] in Orissa.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iakoweb.com/pakhada.html|title=Welcome to IAKOWEB.COM|access-date=10 March 2015|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924032151/http://www.iakoweb.com/pakhada.html|archive-date=24 September 2015}}</ref>

==Texts==

===Agni Purana===
One of the earliest extant manual of Indian martial arts is in the ] (dated to between the 8th and the 11th century).<ref name=Zarrilli1992/> The dhanurveda section in the Agni Purana spans chapters 248–251, categorizing weapons into thrown and unthrown classes and further divided into several sub-classes. It catalogs training into five major divisions for different types of warriors, namely charioteers, elephant-riders, horsemen, infantry, and wrestlers.

The nine ]s (stances) in the fight are listed below:
#''{{IAST|samapada}}'' ("holding the feet even"): standing in closed ranks with the feet put together (248.9)
#''{{IAST|vaiśākha}}'': standing erect with the feet apart (248.10)
#''{{IAST|maṇḍala}}'' ("disk"): standing with the knees apart, arranged in the shape of a flock of geese (248.11)
#''{{IAST|ālīḍha}}'' ("licked, polished"): bending the right knee with the left foot pulled back (248.12)
#''{{IAST|pratyālīḍha}}'': bending the left knee with the right foot pulled back (248.13)
#''{{IAST|jāta}}'' ("origin"): placing the right foot straight with the left foot perpendicular, the ankles being five fingers apart (248.14)
#''{{IAST|daṇḍāyata}}'' ("extended staff"): keeping the right knee bent with the left leg straight, or vice versa; called ''{{IAST|vikaṭa}}'' ("dreadful") if the two legs are two palm-lengths apart (248.16)
#''{{IAST|sampuṭa}}'' ("hemisphere") (248.17)
#''{{IAST|swastika}}'' ("well-being"): keeping the feet 16 fingers apart and lifting the feet a little (248.19)

Then there follows a more detailed discussion of archery technique.

The section concludes with listing the names of actions or "deeds" possible with a number of weapons, including 32 positions to be taken with sword and shield (''{{IAST|khaḍgacarmavidhau}}''),<ref>
''{{IAST|(1.) bhrāntam (2.) udbhrāntam (3.) āviddham (4.) āplutaṃ (5.) viplutaṃ (6.) sṛtaṃ }}''
''{{IAST|(7.) sampātaṃ (8.) samudīśañca (9.-10.) śyenapātamathākulaṃ}}'' (251.1)
''{{IAST|(11.) uddhūtam (12.) avadhūtañca (13.) savyaṃ (14.) dakṣiṇam eva ca}}''
''{{IAST|(15.-16.) anālakṣita-visphoṭau (17.-18.) karālendramahāsakhau}}'' (251.2)
''{{IAST|(19.-20.) vikarāla-nipātau ca (21.-22.) vibhīṣaṇa-bhayānakau}}''
''{{IAST|(23–24.) samagrārdha (25.) tṛtīyāṃśapāda (26.-28.) pādardhavārijāḥ}}'' (251.3)
''{{IAST|(29.) pratyālīḍham (30.) athālīḍhaṃ (31.) varāhaṃ (32.) lulitan tathā}}'' (251.4ab)
</ref> 11 names of techniques of using a rope in fighting, along with 5 names of "acts in the rope operation" along with lists of "deeds" pertaining to the ] (war-quoit), the spear, the ''tomara'' (iron club), the ], the axe, the hammer, the ''bhindipāla'' or ''laguda'', the ], the dagger, the slingshot, and finally deeds with a bludgeon or cudgel. A short passage near the end of the text returns to the larger concerns of warfare and explains the various uses of war elephants and men. The text concludes with a description of how to appropriately send the well-trained fighter off to war.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nmmkM0fVS-cC&pg=PA467 |title=Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Puranas – Swami Parmeshwaranand|page=467 |access-date=27 September 2015|isbn=9788176252263|last1=Parmeshwaranand|first1=Swami|year=2001|publisher=Sarup & Sons }}</ref>

===Arthashastra===
The ], c. 4th century BCE, typically attributed to ] chief advisor of ] is one of the earliest treatises on statecraft, including diverse topics such as economics, politics, diplomacy and military strategy.

===Others===
There is an extant ''Dhanurveda-Samhita'' dating to the mid-14th century, by Brhat Sarngadhara Paddhati (ed. 1888).<ref>{{cite book|url=http://libcat.unigoa.ac.in/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=1637|title=Vasisthas Dhanurveda Samhita : (Text with English Translation)|website=Goa University Library|date=29 January 1991 |access-date=8 May 2014}}</ref>
<br />Other scattered references to fighting arts in medieval texts include the:
<br />''Kamandakiya Nitisara'' (c. 8th century<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/stream/kamandakiyanitis00kamarich#page/n5/mode/2up|title=Kamandakiya Nitisara or, The Elements of polity, in English.|author=Manmatha Nath Dutt|via=Internet Archive|access-date=24 June 2014|publisher=Calcutta, Manmatha Nath Dutt|year=1869}}</ref> ed. Manmatha Nath Dutt, 1896),
<br />The '']'' by ] (10th century),
<br />The ''Yuktikalpataru'' of ] (11th century) and
<br />The '']'' of ] (12th century)

==Weapons and arts==
A wide array of weapons are used in the Indian subcontinent, some of which are not found anywhere else. According to P.C. Chakravati in ''The Art of War in Ancient India'', armies used standard weapons such as wooden or metal-tipped spears, swords, thatched bamboo, wooden or metal shields, axes, short and longbows in warfare as early as the 4th century BC.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Art of War in Ancient India |author=P.C. Chakravarti |year=2004 |publisher=Low Price Publications |isbn=978-8185557472}}</ref> Military accounts of the ] (c. 240–480) and the later Agni Purana identify over 130 different weapons.

The '']'' divides weapons into thrown and unthrown classes. The thrown (''mukta'') class includes twelve weapons altogether which come under four categories, viz.
], the most characteristic<ref name=Capwell/> of daggers in the Indian subcontinent.]]

*''yantra-mukta'': projectile weapons such as the sling or the bow
*''pāṇi-mukta'': weapons thrown by hand such as the javelin
*''mukta-sandarita'': weapons that are thrown and drawn back, such as the rope-spear
*''mantra-mukta'': mythical weapons that are thrown by magic incantations (]), numbering 6 types

These were opposed to the much larger unthrown class of three categories.
*''hasta-śastra'' or ''amukta'': melee weapons that do not leave the hand, numbering twenty types
*''muktāmukta'': weapons that can be thrown or used in-close, numbering 98 varieties
*''bāhu-yuddha'' or ''bhuja-yuddha'': weapons of the body, i.e. unarmed fighting

The duel with bow and arrows is considered the noblest, fighting with the spear ranks next, while fighting with the sword is considered unrefined, and wrestling is classed as the meanest or worst form of fighting. Only a ] could be an ] (teacher) of sastravidya, ] and ] should learn from the Acharya, while a ] could not take a teacher, left to "fight of his own in danger".<ref>{{cite book |title=Agni Purana |publisher=Sri Satguru Publications |year=2009}}</ref>

Over time, weaponry evolved and India became famous for its flexible ] steel. The most commonly taught weapons in the Indian martial arts today are types of swords, daggers, spears, staves, cudgels, and maces.<ref name=Draeger/>

Weapons are linked to several superstitions and cultural beliefs in the Indian subcontinent. Drawing a weapon without reason is forbidden and considered by Hindus to be disrespectful to the goddess ]ka. Thus the saying that a sword cannot be sheathed until it has drawn blood. It was a mother's duty to tie a warrior's sword around his waist before war or a duel. In addition, she would cut her finger with the sword and make a ] on his head from a drop of her blood. Weapons themselves were also anointed with tilak, most often from the blood of a freshly-decapitated goat (''chatanga''). Other taboos include looking at one's reflection in the blade, telling the price or source of acquisition, throwing it on the ground or using it for domestic purposes.<ref group=web>{{cite web|url=http://www.nationalmuseumindia.gov.in/departments-arms-armour.asp?lk=dp9|title=National Museum, New Delhi|access-date=10 March 2015}}</ref>
]

===Swordsmanship (Khadgavidya)===

] and ] are said to be skilled swordsmen in ]. Sword-fighting<ref name="Traditional military practices in North India">{{cite web|title=Traditional military practices in North India|date=15 January 2014|url=https://indianfight.com/indian-technique-with-a-sword/}}</ref> is one of the common Indian fighting arts. Varieties include the curved single-edge sword, the straight double-edge sword, the two-handed longsword, the ], and the ] or flexible sword. Techniques differ from one state to another but all make extensive use of circular movements, often circling the weapon around the user's head. The flexible nature and lightweight of Indian swords allows for speed but provides little defensive ability, so that the swordsman must instead rely on body maneuvers to dodge attacks. Entire systems exist focusing on drawing the sword out of the opponent's body. Stances and ] traditionally made up the early training before students progress to free sparring with sticks to simulate swords in an exercise called ], although this term is more often used in English when referring to the Panjabi-Sikh fighting style. A common way to practice precision-cutting is to slice ]s or ]s, eventually doing so while blindfolded. Pairing two swords of equal length, though considered impractical in some parts of the world, is common and was considered highly advantageous in the Indian subcontinent.<ref name=Draeger/>

===Staffplay (Lathi khela)===
{{Main|Lathi khela}}
Stick-fighting (]) may be taught as part of a wider system like ], ] or on its own.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} In the '']'' the sage ] enjoins all women to practice fighting with single-stick, quarterstaff, sword and bow and arrow in addition to the art of love-making. The stick (''lathi'' in ]) is typically made of ] with steel caps at the ends to prevent it from splintering.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} Wooden sticks made from Indian ebony may also be used.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} It ranges from the length of a cudgel to a staff equal to the wielder's height.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} The stick used during matches is covered in leather to cushion the impact.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} Points are awarded based on which part of the body is hit. Techniques differ from system to system, but northern styles tend to primarily use only one end of the staff for attacking while the other end is held with both hands.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}

Southern styles like also make use of this technique but will more often use both ends of the staff to strike. The latter is the more common method of attacking in the eastern states and ], combined with squatting and frequent changes in height.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}

===Spearplay===

] is said to be a master in spearplay warfare in '']'', while ] was also noted to be an excellent warrior in the field of spearplay. Also according to Indian Hindu myths, ], the son of Lord ], is said to be skilled in spear-fighting, by holding his divine spear called ]. The Indian spear is typically made of ] with a steel blade. It can be used in hand-to-hand combat or thrown when the fighters are farther apart. Despite primarily being a thrusting weapon, the wide spearhead also allows for many slashing techniques. By the 17th century, Rajput mercenaries in the Mughal army were using a type of spear which integrated a pointed spear butt and a club near the head, making it similar to a mace. On the other hand, the longer cavalry spear was made of wood, with red cloth attached near the blade to prevent the opponent's blood from dripping to the shaft. The Marathas were revered for their skill of wielding a ten-foot spear called ''bothati'' ({{lang|pa|ਬੋਥਾਟੀ}}) from horseback. Bothati fighting is practiced with a ball-tipped lance, the end of which is covered in dye so that hits may easily be confirmed. In solo training, the spear is aimed at a pile of stones. From this was eventually developed the uniquely Indian ''vita'' which has a {{convert|5|ft|m}} length of cord attached to the butt end of the weapon and tied around the spearman's wrist. Using this cord the spear can be pulled back after it has been thrown.<ref name=Draeger>{{cite book |title=Comprehensive Asian Fighting Arts |author=] and Robert W. Smith |year=1969 |publisher=Kondansha International Limited}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Social life in Maharashtra under the Peshwas |last=Desai |first=Sudha Vishwanath |year=1980 |publisher=Popular Prakashan |oclc= 8243834 |page=131 }}</ref>

===Archery (Dhanurvidya)===
Archery<ref name="History of Archery in India">{{cite web|title=History of Archery in India|url=https://www.iloveindia.com/sports/archery/history.html}}</ref> is noted to be one of the noblest form of defense within Indian cultural heritage. As mentioned in Vedic literature, the bow and arrow is the most applauded weapon among Kshatriyas. ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] were all said to be great archers.

''Dhanurveda'' is an ancient treatise on the science of archery. It describes the practices and uses of archery, the craft of bow and arrow making, training of the army, and enumerates the rules of engagement. The treatise also discusses martial arts in relation to the training of warriors, charioteers, cavalry, elephant warriors, infantry etc.
It was considered as a sin to shoot a warrior from the back and fight more than one warrior at a time.
The bow used in the Vedic period were called '''danush''', and were described in detail in the Vedas. The curved shape of the bow is called vakra in the Artha Veda. The bowstring was called jya, and was strung only when needed. An arrow was called an '''iṣu''', and a quiver was called an iṣudhi which was slung on the back.<ref>The Rig Veda/Mandala 6/Hymn 75/5</ref> Archers wore a hastaghna, which was an arm guard or shield usually worn on the left forearm and was used to protect the wearer from friction caused by the bowstring.

A ''dhanushkara'' was a bowyer, or the profession of bow crafting and arrow making, and it had become a regular profession by the early Vedic period. Others called ''jyakara'' specialized in making bowstrings.

]s made of horn, sinew, and wood were invented in the Asian Steppes and would have been an integral part of the armory of the ] people. As in other civilizations such as the Hittites and Persians, the use of composite bows coincides with chariot warfare. Additionally the smaller size was of the compound bow would have made it preferable on mounted warfare.

A type of Indian ] was five to six feet long and fired a long cane arrow with metal or bone arrow heads. The Cretan chronicler ] who accompanied ] into India, had noted that the warriors would use a bamboo bow, which had to rest on the ground and steady with the feet to draw to its full length. The arrow fired from this bamboo bow could penetrate any armor used in antiquity.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Gabriel|first=Richard A.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y1ngxn_xTOIC|title=The Great Armies of Antiquity|date=2002|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-275-97809-9|language=en}}</ref> The Indian long bows were described as the height of their users by ], and ] bows in 1518 as "long like those of England".<ref>no primary attribution, quoted in ]. Naukar, Rajput, & Sepoy. The ethnohistory of the military labour market in Hindustan, 1450–1860. University of Cambridge Oriental Publications no. 43. Cambridge University Press 1990.</ref>

Traditional archery is today practiced mainly in the far northern states of ] and ]. One sport which has persisted into the present day is '']'' from ], in which a team of archers attempt to shoot blunt arrows at the legs of the opposing team.<ref name="Timechart"/>

===Mace-fighting (Gadayuddha)===
] dueling ]]]

] is the weapon of God ] in ]. Lord ] also carries a gada named ] in one of his four hands. In the Mahabharata epic, the fighters ], ], ] and ] were said to be masters of the gada. In the mace combat, Bhima wins the final battle against Duryodhana by hitting his inner thigh. Such an attack below the waist was said to be against the etiquette of mace duels, implying a degree of commonality to this type of fighting. It was and still is used as training equipment by wrestlers. The traditional ] was essentially a wooden or steel sphere mounted on a handle and with a single spike at the top. An alternative mace-head was the lotus-shaped ''padam''. According to the '']'', the gada can be handled in twenty different ways. Due to its weight, the gada is said to be best suited to fighters with a large build or great strength. The Mughal club or mace, known as a ''gurj'' or ''gargaj'', had a head consisting of 8–10 petal-shaped blades. Fitted with basket-hilt, a spherical pommel, and a spiked top, this type of club was designed for beating down armour-clad opponents. Alternatively, some gurj had a spiked top and a hand-guard.<ref group="web">{{cite web|url=http://www.nationalmuseumindia.gov.in/prodCollections.asp?pid=63&id=9&lk=dp9|title=National Museum, New Delhi|access-date=10 March 2015}}</ref>

===Wrestling (Mallayuddha) {{anchor|Wrestling}}===
{{Main|Malla-yuddha}}
]
Grappling arts (''malla-vidya''), practiced either as sport or fighting style, are found throughout the Indian subcontinent. True combat-wrestling is called ], while the term ] refers to wrestling for sport. Malla-yuddha was codified into four forms which progressed from purely sportive contests of strength to actual full-contact fights known as ''yuddha''.<ref name=Draeger/> Due to the extreme violence, this final form is generally no longer practised. The second form, wherein the wrestlers attempt to lift each other off the ground for three seconds, persists in ]. Traditional malla-yuddha is virtually extinct in the north where it has been supplanted by kusti, but another form called ] still exists in parts of India and ], Pakistan{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. ] was another old grappling art in which the competitors wrestled while wearing a horned knuckleduster. In a later style called ''naki ka kusti'' (claw wrestling), the duellists fought with ].<ref>{{cite book |title=The Book Of The Sword |author=Richard F. Burton |year=1884 |publisher=Chatto and Windus |isbn=0-486-25434-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/bookofsword00burt |author-link=Richard F. Burton }}</ref> Numerous styles of folk wrestling are also found in India's countryside, such as ] from ], ] from ] and Khomlainai among the Bodos.

===Wrestling (Pehlwani)===
{{Main|Pehlwani}}
] is a form of wrestling from the ]. It was developed in the ] by combining native ] with influences from Persian '']''.<ref name=Alter1992a>{{cite journal |first=Joseph S. |last=Alter |date=May 1992a |title=The "sannyasi" and the Indian Wrestler: The Anatomy of a Relationship |journal=American Ethnologist |volume=19 |issue=2 |pages=317–336 |issn=0094-0496 |doi=10.1525/ae.1992.19.2.02a00070}}</ref><ref name=Alter1992b>{{cite book |last=Alter |first=Joseph S. |title=The Wrestler's Body: Identity and Ideology in North India |year=1992b |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley |isbn=0-520-07697-4}}</ref> One of the most famous practitioners of pehlwani was ] (Ghulam Mohammad Baksh Butt), who is considered one of the greatest wrestlers of all time.<ref>{{cite news|title=The culture and crisis of kushti|url=http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/columns/sainath/the-culture-and-crisis-of-kushti/article5297790.ece?homepage=true|newspaper=The Hindu|date=31 October 2013|access-date=2 July 2016}}</ref>

===Boxing (Mushtiyuddha)===
Boxing (]) is traditionally considered the roughest form of Indian unarmed combat. In ancient times it was popular throughout northern Indian subcontinent, but is rarely practiced today. Boxers harden their fists by striking stones and other hard objects. Matches may be either one-on-one or group fights. All kinds of strikes and grabs are allowed, and any part of the body may be targeted except the groin.<ref name=Draeger/> Another form of boxing was ''loh-musti'' (meaning "iron fist"), said{{By whom|date=August 2014}} to have been practiced by the God ]{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. In this variation, boxers fought while wielding a ] or steel bracelet like a knuckleduster{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. Grabs, kicks, biting and attacks to the groin were all legal, the only prohibition being spitting on the opponent which was considered crude and dishonourable{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. The kara used for regular matches was unadorned{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}, but the form employed during war had one or more spikes around its edge{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. The kara may be paired with one on each hand{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}, but it was generally only worn on one hand so the other hand could be left free{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. In some cases the free hand could be paired with another weapon, most commonly the ]{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}.

===Kicking===
Kick-fighting ('']'') is the preserve of tribes from ]. While the entire ] of northeast India and northwest Myanmar was traditionally known for their skill with broadswords (''dao'') and other weapons, disputes among tribesmen and between tribes were settled with a solely kick-based form of unarmed fighting. The goal is to either drive the opponent to their knees or outside of the ring. Only the feet are used to strike, and even blocking must be done with the legs.<ref>"Nagaland Kickboxing". ''Last Man Standing''. BBC and Discovery USA. 17 July 2007</ref>

===Pugilism===
Many forms of unarmed combat (''bāhu-yuddha'' or ''bhuja-yuddha'') incorporate too wide an array of techniques to be accurately categorized. In modern times when the carrying of weapons is no longer legal, teachers of the martial arts often emphasise the unarmed techniques as these are seen to be more practical for self-defense purposes. A warrior who fights unarmed is referred to as a ''bhajanh'', literally meaning someone who fights with their arms. The bare-handed components of Indian fighting arts are typically based on the movements of animals, Hindu deities. Binot, a Central Indian art which focuses on defending against both armed and unarmed opponents, may be the earliest system of its kind. In the Mughal era, such fighters were known as ''ek-hath'' (lit. "one-hand"), so named because they would demonstrate their art using only one arm.<ref name=Draeger/>

===Bal Vidya===
64 different types of skills and arts existed in ancient India which lead to well-developed individuals boosting their mind, body, and intellect making them capable of performing their responsibilities efficiently and effectively on personal, social and national level. Today, unhealthy and irregular lifestyles, frustrations and rising competitions in every sphere of life are affecting the health of people, especially the youth. In such a scenario, one of the ancient Indian arts referred to as "Bal Vidya" can help not only to improve the physical health but also upscale the mental and intellectual well-being of a person. A strong mind and intellect is equally important along with a strong body. Shree Aniruddha Upasana Foundation (Mumbai, India) attempts to review these ancient Indian martial arts form and provides "Bal Vidya" training to both men and women free of charge. Art forms like Mudgal Vidya, Vajra Mushthi, Surya Bhedan, Ashwa and various types of Yashwanti Malla Vidya using various weapons like Laathi (iron-bound bamboo stick), Kaathi (Pole), Fari-Gadga, Dorkhand (rope) and Dandpatta (gauntlet-sword). A book detailing all these art forms with the title "Bhartiya Prachin Bal Vidya" (The Ancient Indian Bal Art) is also available for achieving proficiency through practice post attending training sessions.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://ancientindianmartialarts.blogspot.in/2011/08/bal-vidya-and-yashwanti-mall-vidya.html |title = Bal Vidya and Yashwanti Mall Vidya}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://aniruddhafoundation.com/compassion-bala-vidya-men-women/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170729192604/https://aniruddhafoundation.com/compassion-bala-vidya-men-women/ |archive-date=29 July 2017 |title=Bala Vidya (For Men and Women) – SHREE ANIRUDDHA UPASANA FOUNDATION}}</ref><ref>]</ref>{{Circular reference|date=June 2018}}<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.slideshare.net/ashoknene/sixty-four-arts-of-ancient-india-45933958 | title=Sixty four arts of ancient india| date=17 March 2015}}</ref>

==Systems==
As in other respects of ], Indian martial arts can be roughly divided into northern and southern styles. The northern systems (including Pakistan and Bangladesh) may generically be referred to as '']'', although this term is often used synonymously with ]. The main difference is that ] was more exposed to ] influence during the ], while ] is more conservative in preserving ancient and medieval traditions. The exception to this rule are the northeastern states which, due to their geographic location, were closed off from most pre-European foreign invaders. As a result, northeast Indian culture and fighting methods are also closely related to that of ] and ]. In addition to the major division between north and south, martial systems in the Indian subcontinent tend to be associated with certain states, cities, villages or ethnic groups.<ref name=vajramushti/>

===Regional styles===
;Andhra Pradesh
Masters in Andhra Pradesh trace their lineage to the Vijayanagara empire, popular in ] region. The native system of ''Chedi Talimkhana'' or ''yudhkaushalya che talim'' is often abbreviated to '''Talimkhana''' or simply '''Talim'''. The art makes use of several weapons which are used in preset forms. These include knife fighting (''baku samu''), sword fighting (''katti samu''), and staff fighting (''kara samu'') in addition to other weapons such as the ] and ].<ref group=web>{{cite news|url=http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-andhrapradesh/ancient-martial-art-form-still-in-vogue/article831534.ece|title=Ancient martial art form still in vogue|author=B.V.S. Bhaskar|newspaper=The Hindu|access-date=10 March 2015|date=15 October 2010}}</ref><ref name=vajramushti>{{cite book |title=Vajramushti: Martial Arts of India |author=Christopher Fernandes |year=2011 |publisher=Creative House International Press}}</ref>

;Bengal and Northeast India
Bengali war-dances bear testament to the weapons once used in the Bengal region. Today most of these weapons are used only in choreographed fights, including ''dao khela'' (knife fighting) and ''fala khela'' (sword fighting){{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. Traditional stick-fighting (]) is still used in free sparring today{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. The sticks may be short like a cudgel or a long staff. The former are sometimes paired with a shield.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}

] is a traditional ] martial art<ref name="RahaChattopadhyay2017">{{cite book|author1=Bipasha Raha|author2=Subhayu Chattopadhyay|title=Mapping the Path to Maturity: A Connected History of Bengal and the North-East|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SCtEDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT102|date=22 December 2017|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-351-03412-8|pages=102–}}</ref><ref name="Foster2009">{{cite book|author=S. Foster|title=Worlding Dance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=re3MCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA129|date=10 June 2009|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan UK|isbn=978-0-230-23684-4|pages=129–}}</ref> – a kind of ] practised mainly in ]<ref name="RahaChattopadhyay2017"/><ref name="Foster2009"/> and ]. Stick fighting has an ancient history in the ]. Rich farmers and other eminent people hired ''lathial'' for security and as a symbol of their power. Duels were used as a way to protect or take land and other possessions. A proverb in some South Asian languages is "whoever wields the lathi keeps the cow". ]s (feudal lords) sent groups of ''lathial'' to forcefully collect taxes from villagers. Lathi training was at one time included in the ] system of education.<ref name="RahaChattopadhyay2017"/><ref name="Foster2009"/>

;Bihar
"Pari-khanda" is a fighting form created by ] and is still practised in many parts of ]. "Pari" means shield and "khanda" means sword according "Chhau" region, therefore this art uses sword and shield for fighting. This fighting form has given birth to a local dance form named "Chhau" dance and its martial elements have been fully absorbed by this dance. It is even practised in some parts of ] and ]. Chhau is the name of the traditional dance- drama of the eastern regions of India and is of three types. The three forms of "Chhau" are named after the district or village where they are performed, i.e. the Purulia Chau of ], the Seraikella Chau of ] and the Mayurbhanj Chau of ].

;Karnataka
The Kannada fighting arts are taught exclusively at traditional training halls or ''garadi mane''. Disciplines include unarmed combat (''kai varase''), staff-fighting (''kolu varase'') and sword-fighting (''katti varase'') among various other weapons. These are most often seen today only during choreographed demonstrations at festivals.<ref name=vajramushti/>

;Kashmir
Kashmiri swordsmanship is said to have an ancient history, but it was only much later that it acquired its modern name of ]. Sqay survived a decline following the ] by adopting competitive methodologies of karate and taekwondo. Types of competition include sparring, breaking, and forms or ''khawankay''. Practitioners spar using fake swords called ''tora'' which are paired with a shield. Sparring is point-based, the points being awarded for successful hits with the tora or with the foot.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.icsqay.com/|title=International Council of Sqay|access-date=5 November 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180805053936/http://icsqay.com/|archive-date=5 August 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref>

;Kerala
]
The ] martial of ], came into its present form through the ], the local variation of the ] educational institution in ]. The most common weapons today are the staff, stick, sword, shield, spear, dagger and flexible sword, locally known as ].<ref name="Zarrilli1998"/> Kerala is also home to a native form of ] called ].

;Maharashtra
The Marathas developed their fighting style based on the state's hilly geography. ] today teaches armed techniques for use in single combat as well as defense against several opponents. Other weapons include the sword, shield, spear, dagger, kukri, double deer horns, and bow and arrow.<ref name=vajramushti/>

;Manipur
The Manipuri art of ] was once practiced by the state's indigenous hill tribes who would engage in duels governed by strict rules of conduct. The armed component called ] is named after the system's main weapons, the ''thang'' (sword) and ''ta'' (spear). Practitioners spar through ''cheibi gatka'' in which a foam sword is used together with a shield. Unarmed huyen lalong is called ''sarit-sarak'' and is used in conjunction with thang-ta when the fighter loses their weapon.<ref name=AG/>

;Nagaland
] is a semi-contact combat sport characterized by kicking and blocking solely using the soles of the feet. The word Aki Kiti means "kick fighting".

;Odisha
The Odishan martial art traces back to the ''paika'' class of warriors who were particularly known for their use of the ''khanda'' or double-edge straight sword. During times of peace, the paika would hone their skills through martial dances, forms-training and various acrobatics.<ref name="Odisha 2">{{cite journal |title=Paika Akheda the Martial Art of Odisha |journal=International Journal of Physical Education, Sports and Health |url=https://www.kheljournal.com/archives/2016/vol3issue4/PartF/3-4-30-564.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwiVq_L07cjtAhW1kOYKHQDXD5sQFjADegQIFRAB&usg=AOvVaw2JgMxKsraaLHW13AQgTdOO |access-date=12 December 2020}}</ref> Their descendants have preserved these exercises in training halls called ], and demonstrate them mainly through street performances. Their method of sword training called ''phari-khanda'' is still used as the first part of the ]. Other weapons include the staff and guantlet-sword.<ref name="Odisha1">{{cite journal |title=Martial Traditions of Odisha |journal=Odisha Review |pages=47–49 |url=http://magazines.odisha.gov.in/Orissareview/2014/Dec/engpdf/48-50.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwiVq_L07cjtAhW1kOYKHQDXD5sQFjABegQIAhAF&usg=AOvVaw1v53S3uIwal9wT032bYIBF |access-date=12 December 2020 }}{{Dead link|date=September 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>

;North West India
Martial arts in northwest India and adjacent Pakistan were traditionally referred to by several terms but the most common today is '']'' or "science of edged weapons"{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. Swordsmen practiced their techniques either in routines using real swords, or freestyle sparring with wooden sticks called ], a form of stick-fighting. Gatka is associated with the Sikh history and an integral part of an array of Rajput Shastar Vidiya. During the colonial period, the term ''gatka'' was extended to mean northwestern martial arts in general{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. Some aspects of the art, such as the unarmed techniques or fighting in armour, are today practiced almost exclusively by the ] order of Sikhs{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}}. Gatka incorporates several forms, each with their own set of weapons, strategies and footwork. In the late 18th century, this martial art further developed as a recreational game and University Lahore codified its rules for playing it as a game.

;Tamil Nadu
{{Infobox martial art
| image = Kathiravan.jpg
| name = சிலம்பம்
| aka = Silambattam
| focus = Traditional Weapons
| creator =God Murugan
| martialart = Silambam
| olympic = No
| origin =பாரத(தமிழ் நாடு)}}

The native Tamil martial art has come to be referred to as ] after its main weapon, the bamboo staff. Training begins with footwork patterns before progressing to stances and subsequently fighting techniques. Aside from its namesake, silambam includes a variety of weapons such as the sword, twin sticks, double deer horns, whip, sword, shield and sword, dagger, flexible sword and sickle. Unarmed silambam (''kai silambam'') is based on animal movements such as the snake, eagle, tiger and elephant. Other Martial Arts of Tamil Nadu are ], Adi Thadi, ],<ref>{{cite journal |title=Keeping Silambam spinning |author=Marco Ferrarese |journal=Penang Monthly |date=July 2014 |pages=20–22}}</ref> ]veechu, Vaalveechu, Gusthi (Boxing form of Tamil Nadu, not to be confused with North Indian ] which is a ] art). There are 64 various kind of arts mentioned in Tamil sangam literature and they are normally called as ] but most of them are now extinct and not in use nowadays.

==Influence==
<!-- IMPORTANT: Just starting the section. It needs the lot more improvement, with citations, expand it with subsection for each nation and their martial arts influenced by the Indian martial arts. To be completed in the future iteration. Please contribute. Tips: required citations can be found within the articles pipelinked below. Just need to spend the time to summarise from the linked articles to this seciton here. -->
] cultural influence zone of ] for transmission of elements of Indian culture including martial arts.]]
With expansion of ] cultural influence of ],<ref name="Hal1985">{{cite book|author=Kenneth R. Hal|title=Maritime Trade and State Development in Early Southeast Asia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ncqGAAAAIAAJ|year=1985|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=978-0-8248-0843-3|page=63}}</ref> through transmission of ]<ref>{{cite book | title = Lost Kingdoms: Hindu-Buddhist Sculpture of Early Southeast Asia, Metropolitan museum, New York: exhibition catalogues | author = Guy, John | publisher = Metropolitan Museum of Art | year = 2014 | isbn = 9781588395245| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=vO_-AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA11}}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia | title = The spread of Hinduism in Southeast Asia and the Pacific | encyclopedia = Britannica | url = https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hinduism/The-spread-of-Hinduism-in-Southeast-Asia-and-the-Pacific}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Kapur|author2=Kamlesh|title=History Of Ancient India (portraits Of A Nation), 1/e|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9ic4BjWFmNIC&pg=PA465|year=2010|publisher=Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd|isbn=978-81-207-4910-8|page=465}}</ref> and the ]<ref name="college">{{cite journal |last=Fussman |first=Gérard | title= History of India and Greater India |journal=La Lettre du Collège de France |issue=4 |pages=24–25 |year=2008–2009 |url=https://journals.openedition.org/lettre-cdf/756 |access-date=20 December 2016|doi=10.4000/lettre-cdf.756 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name=Coedes>{{cite book|last= Coedès|first= George|author-link= George Coedès|editor= Walter F. Vella|others= trans.Susan Brown Cowing|title= The Indianized States of Southeast Asia|year= 1968|publisher= University of Hawaii Press|isbn= 978-0-8248-0368-1}}</ref> leading to ] through formation of non-Indian southeast Asian native ]s<ref>{{citation |first=Pierre-Yves |last=Manguin |chapter=From Funan to Sriwijaya: Cultural continuities and discontinuities in the Early Historical maritime states of Southeast Asia |title=25 tahun kerjasama Pusat Penelitian Arkeologi dan Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient |location=Jakarta |publisher=Pusat Penelitian Arkeologi / EFEO |year=2002 |pages=59–82 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NJBwAAAAMAAJ}}</ref> which adopted ]<ref name="academia edu">{{citation |last=Lavy |first=Paul | title= As in Heaven, So on Earth: The Politics of Visnu Siva and Harihara Images in Preangkorian Khmer Civilisation |journal=Journal of Southeast Asian Studies |volume=34 |pages=21–39 |number=1 |year=2003 |url=https://www.academia.edu/2635407 |access-date=23 December 2015|doi=10.1017/S002246340300002X |s2cid=154819912 }}</ref> and other Indian elements<ref>{{Cite book|title=A history of India|first=Hermann|last=Kulke|date=2004|publisher=Routledge|others=Rothermund, Dietmar 1933-|isbn=0203391268|edition= 4th|location=New York|oclc=57054139}}</ref> such as the ], ], ], Sankritised institutional mottos, Sanskritised educational institute names, as well as adoption of ], ], ], ], and ], a process which has also been aided by the ongoing historic expansion of ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=A history of India|first=Hermann|last=Kulke|date=2004|publisher=Routledge|others=Rothermund, Dietmar, 1933–|isbn=0203391268|edition= 4th|location=New York|oclc=57054139}}</ref> The martial arts influenced by the Indian martial arts include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ],] etc.{{Citation needed|date=November 2024}}

==See also==
{{Portal|India|Martial arts}}

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==References== ==References==
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==See Also==
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Latest revision as of 00:01, 23 December 2024

Fighting systems of the Indian subcontinent

Indian martial arts refers to the fighting systems of the Indian subcontinent. A variety of terms are used for the English phrases "Indian martial arts", deriving from ancient sources. While they may seem to imply specific disciplines (e.g. archery, armed combat), by Classical times they were used generically for all fighting systems.

Among the most common terms today, śastra-vidyā, is a compound of the words śastra (weapon) and vidyā (knowledge). Dhanurveda derives from the words for bow (dhanushya) and knowledge (veda), the "science of archery" in Puranic literature, later applied to martial arts in general. The Vishnu Purana text describes dhanuveda as one of the traditional eighteen branches of "applied knowledge" or upaveda, along with shastrashāstra or military science. A later term, yuddha kalā, comes from the words yuddha meaning fight or combat and kalā meaning art or skill. The related term śastra kalā (lit. weapon art) usually refers specifically to armed disciplines. Another term, yuddha-vidyā or "combat knowledge", refers to the skills used on the battlefield, encompassing not only actual fighting but also battle formations and strategy. Martial arts are usually learnt and practiced in the traditional akharas.

History

Further information: Military history of India and Origins of Asian martial arts

Antiquity (pre-Gupta)

An Indus valley civilization seal shows two men spearing one another in a duel which seem to be centered on a woman. A statue of a spear thrower was also excavated from an Indus valley site.

Dhanurveda, a section found in the Vedas (1500 BCE - 1100 BCE) contains references to martial arts. Indian epics contain the earliest accounts of combat, both armed and bare-handed. Most deities of the Hindu-Buddhist pantheon are armed with their own personal weapon, and are revered not only as master martial artists but often as originators of those systems themselves. The Mahabharata tells of fighters armed only with daggers besting lions, and describes a prolonged battle between Arjuna and Karna using bows, swords, trees, rocks and fists. Another unarmed battle in the Mahabharata describes two combatants boxing with clenched fists and fighting with kicks, finger strikes, knee strikes and headbutts.

The oldest recorded organized unarmed fighting art in the Indian subcontinent is malla-yuddha or combat-wrestling, codified into four forms in the Vedic Period. Stories describing Krishna report that he sometimes engaged in wrestling matches where he used knee strikes to the chest, punches to the head, hair pulling, and strangleholds. Based on such accounts, Svinth (2002) traces press-ups and squats used by Indian wrestlers to the pre-classical era.

In Sanskrit literature the term dwandwayuddha referred to a duel, such that it was a battle between only two warriors and not armies. Epics often describe the duels between deities and god-like heroes as lasting a month or more. The malla-yuddha (wrestling match) between Bhima and Jarasandha lasts 27 days. Similarly, the dwandayuddha between Parasurama and Bhishma lasts for 30 days, while that between Krishna and Jambavan lasts for 28 days. Likewise, the dwandwayudda between Bali and Dundubhi, a demon in the form of a water buffalo, lasts for 45 days. The Manusmriti tells that if a warrior's topknot comes loose during such a fight or duel, the opponent must give him time to bind his hair before continuing.

The Charanavyuha authored by Shaunaka mentions four upaveda (applied Vedas). Included among them are archery (dhanurveda) and military sciences (shastrashastra), the mastery of which was the duty (dharma) of the warrior class. Kings usually belonged to the kshatria (warrior) class and thus served as heads of the army. They typically practiced archery, wrestling, boxing, and swordsmanship as part of their education. Examples include such rulers as Siddhartha Gautama and Rudradaman. The Chinese monk Xuanzang writes that the emperor Harsha was light on his feet despite his advancing age and managed to dodge and seize an assailant during an assassination attempt.

Many of the popular sports mentioned in the Vedas and the epics have their origins in military training, such as boxing (musti-yuddha), wrestling (maladwandwa), chariot-racing (rathachalan), horse-riding (aswa-rohana) and archery (dhanurvidya). Competitions were held not just as a contest of the players' prowess but also as a means of finding a bridegroom. Arjuna, Rama and Siddhartha Gautama all won their consorts in such tournaments.

In the 3rd century, elements from the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, as well as finger movements in the nata dances, were incorporated into the fighting arts. A number of Indian fighting styles remain closely connected to yoga, dance and performing arts. Some of the choreographed sparring in kalaripayat can be applied to dance and kathakali dancers who knew kalaripayat were believed to be markedly better than other performers. Until recent decades, the chhau dance was performed only by martial artists. Some traditional Indian classical dance schools still incorporate martial arts as part of their exercise regimen.

Written evidence of martial arts in Southern India dates back to the Sangam literature of about the 2nd century BC to the 2nd century AD. The Akananuru and Purananuru describe the use of spears, swords, shields, bows and silambam in the Sangam era. The word kalari appears in the Puram (verses 225, 237, 245, 356) and Akam (verses 34, 231, 293) to describe both a battlefield and combat arena. The word kalari tatt denoted a martial feat, while kalari kozhai meant a coward in war. Each warrior in the Sangam era received regular military training in target practice and horse riding. They specialized in one or more of the important weapons of the period including the spear (vel), sword (val), shield (kedaham), and bow and arrow (vil ambu). The combat techniques of the Sangam period were the earliest precursors to kalaripayat. References to "Silappadikkaram" in Sangam literature date back to the 2nd century. This referred to the silambam staff which was in great demand with foreign visitors.

The ten fighting styles of northern sastra-vidya were said to have been created in different areas based on animals and gods, and designed for the particular geography of their origin. Tradition ascribes their convergence to the 6th-century university of Takshashila, ancient India's intellectual capital. Located in present-day Panjab, Pakistan, the Ramayana ascribes the city's founding to Bharata who named it after his son Taksha. From the 7th to the 5th centuries BC it was held in high regard as a great centre of trade and learning, attracting students from throughout present-day Pakistan and northern India. Among the subjects taught were the "military sciences", and archery was one of its prime arts.

Some measures were put into place to discourage martial activity during the Buddhist period. The Khandhaka in particular forbids wrestling, boxing, archery, and swordsmanship. However, references to fighting arts are found in early Buddhist texts, such as the Lotus Sutra (c. 1st century AD) which refers to a boxing art while speaking to Manjusri. It also categorised combat techniques as joint locks, fist strikes, grapples and throws. The Lotus Sutra makes further mention of a martial art with dance-like movements called Nara. Another Buddhist sutra called Hongyo-kyo (佛本行集經) describes a "strength contest" between Gautama Buddha's half-brother Prince Nanda and his cousin Devadatta. Siddhartha Gautama himself was a champion wrestler and swordsman before becoming the Buddha.

Classical period (3rd to 10th centuries)

Like other branches of Sanskrit literature, treatises on martial arts become more systematic in the course of the 1st millennium AD. Vajra-musti, an armed grappling style, is mentioned in sources of the early centuries AD. Around this time, tantric philosophers developed important metaphysical concepts such as kundalini, chakra, and mantra.

The Sushruta Samhita (c. 4th century) identifies 108 vital points on the human body of which 64 were classified as being lethal if properly struck with a fist or stick. Sushruta's work formed the basis of the medical discipline ayurveda which was taught alongside various martial arts. With numerous other scattered references to vital points in Vedic and epic sources, it is certain that Indian subcontinent's early fighters knew and practised attacking or defending vital points.

Around 630, King Narasimhavarman of the Pallava dynasty commissioned dozens of granite sculptures showing unarmed fighters disarming armed opponents. This is similar to the style described in the Agni Purana.

Martial arts were not exclusive to the kshatriya caste, though the warrior class used them more extensively. The 8th-century text Kuvalaymala by Udyotanasuri recorded fighting techniques being taught at educational institutions, where non-kshatriya students from throughout the subcontinent "were learning and practicing archery, fighting with sword and shield, with daggers, sticks, lances, and with fists, and in duels (niyuddham)". Hindu priests of the traditional gurukula still teach unarmed fighting techniques to their students as a way of increasing stamina and training the physical body.

The Gurjara-Pratihara came into power during the 7th century and founded a kshatriya dynasty in northern India which exceeded the preceding Gupta Empire. During this period, Emperor Nagabhata I (750–780 AD) and Mihir Bhoja I (836–890) commissioned various texts on martial arts, and were themselves practitioners of these systems. Shiva Dhanuveda was composed in this era. The khadga, a two-handed broad-tipped heavy longsword, was given special preference. It was even used for khadga-puja, ritualised worship of the sword. The Gurjara-Pratiharas continuously fought off Arab invasions, particularly during the Caliphate campaigns in India. The Arab chronicler Sulaiman wrote of the Gurjara ruler as the greatest foe to Islamic expansion, while at the same time praising his cavalry.

Middle Ages (11th to 15th centuries)

Locking technique shown at 12th century Airavatesvara Temple

Kalaripayat had developed into its present form by the 11th century, during an extended period of warfare between the Chera and Chola dynasties. The earliest treatise discussing the techniques of malla-yuddha is the Malla Purana (c. 13th century), unlike the earlier Manasollasa which gives the names of movements but no descriptions.

Over a period of several centuries, invading Muslim armies managed to occupy much of present-day Pakistan and northern India. In response to the spread of Muslim rule, the kingdoms of South India united in the 14th century to found the Vijayanagara Empire. Physical culture was given much attention by both royalty and commoners in the empire, with wrestling being particularly popular with both men and women. Gymnasiums have been discovered inside royal quarters of Vijayanagara, and records speak of regular physical training for commanders and their armies during peacetime. Royal palaces and market places had special arenas where royalty and common people alike amused themselves by watching matches such as cockfights, ram fights, and wrestling. One account describes an akhara in Chandragiri where noblemen practiced jumping exercises, boxing, fencing and wrestling almost every day before dinner to maintain their health, and observed that "men as old as seventy years look only thirty".

The Italian traveller Pietro Della Valle wrote of cane-fighting in southern India. According to Pietro, it was the custom for soldiers to specialise in their own particular weapon of expertise and never use any other even during war, "thereby becoming very expert and well practised in that which he takes to".

As their ancient predecessors, swordplay and wrestling were commonly practiced by the royalty of Vijayanagara. Krishna Deva Raya is said to have arranged a duel between a champion swordsman and the prince of Odisha who was known for being an expert with both the sword and dagger. The prince accepted the challenge until he learned he would be fighting one not of royal blood and so killed himself rather than having to "soil his hands". Fernao Nunes and the Persian envoy Adbur Razzak relate that Deva Raya II survived an assassination attempt "as he was a man who knew how to use both sword and dagger better than anyone in his kingdom, avoided by twists and turns of his body the thrusts aimed at him, freed himself from him, and slew him with a short sword that he had".

Mughal era (1526–1857)

Mughal warriors practicing horseback archery, a skill they were highly renowned for
Further information: Mughal weapons, Mughal army, and Pehlwani

After a series of victories, the Central Asian conqueror Babur established Mughal rule in north India during the 16th century. The Mughals were patrons of India's native arts, not only recruiting akhara-trained Rajput fighters for their armies but even practicing these systems themselves. The Ausanasa Dhanurveda Sankalanam dates to the late 16th century, compiled under the patronage of Akbar. The Ain-i-Akbari tells that the Mughal court had various kinds of fighting men from around the empire who would demonstrate their skills every day in exchange for rewards. Among them were said to be both native and Mughal wrestlers, slingers from Gujarat, Hindustani athletes, boxers, stone-throwers and many others.

"There are several kinds of gladiators, each performing astonishing feats. In fighting they show much speed and agility and blend courage and skill in squatting down and rising up again. Some of them use shields in fighting, others use cudgels. Others again use no means of defence, and fight with one hand only; these are called ek-hath. Those who come from the eastern districts of Hindostan use a small shield called "chirwah". Those from the southern provinces have shields of such magnitude as to cover a man and a horse. This kind of shield is called tilwah. Another class use a shield somewhat less than the height of a man. Some again use a long sword, and seizing it with both hands they perform extraordinary feats of skill. There is another famous class called Bankúlis. They have no shield but make use of a peculiar kind of sword which, though curved towards the point, is straight near the handle. They wield it with great dexterity. The skill that they exhibit passes all description. Others are skillful in fighting with daggers and knives of various forms; of these there are upwards of a hundred thousand. Each class has a different name; they also differ in their performances. At court, there are a thousand gladiators always in readiness."

Avid hunters, a popular sport among the Mughals was shikar or tiger-hunting. While often done with arrows and later even rifles, it was considered most impressive to kill a tiger with a hand-to-hand weapon such as a sword or dagger. A warrior who managed to best a tiger would be awarded the title of Pachmar.

In the 16th century, Madhusudana Saraswati of Bengal organised a section of the Naga tradition of armed sannyasi in order to protect Hindus from the intolerant Mughal rulers. Although generally said to abide by the principle of non-violence (ahimsā), these Dashanami monks had long been forming akhara for the practice of both yoga and martial arts. Such warrior-ascetics have been recorded from 1500 to as late as the 18th century, although tradition attributes their creation to the 8th-century philosopher Sankaracharya. They began as a stratum of Rajput warriors who would gather after harvest and arm peasants into militarised units, effectively acting as a self-defense squad. Prevalent in Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Bengal, they would give up their occupations and leave their families to live as mercenaries. Naga sadhu today rarely practice any form of fighting other than wrestling, but still carry trishula, swords, canes and spears. To this day their retreats are called chhauni or armed camps, and they have been known to hold mock jousts among themselves. As recently as the 1950s, it was not unusual for Naga sadhu to strike to kill someone over issues of honour.

There is also a 17th-century Dhanurveda-samhita attributed to Vasistha.

The pehlwani style of wrestling developed in the Mughal Empire by combining native malla-yuddha with influences from Persian varzesh-e bastani.

Maratha dynasty (1674–1859)

Statue of Shivaji, the warrior-king who brought the Maratha people and fighting style to prominence.

Coming from a hilly region characterized by valleys and caves, the Marathas became expert horsemen who favoured light armour and highly mobile cavalry units during war. Known especially as masters of swords and spears, their heavily martial culture and propensity for the lance is mentioned as early as the 7th century by Xuanzang. After serving the Dakshin sultanates of the early 17th century, the scattered Marathas united to found their own kingdom under the warrior Shivaji. Having learned the native art of mardani khela from a young age, Shivaji was a master swordsman and proficient in the use of various weapons. He took advantage of his people's expertise in guerilla tactics (Shiva sutra) to re-establish Hindavi Swarajya (native self-rule) at a time of Muslim supremacy and increasing intolerance. Utilizing speed, focused surprise attacks (typically at night and in rocky terrain), and the geography of Maharashtra, Karnataka, & South India; the Maratha rulers were successfully able to defend their territory from the more numerous and heavily armed Mughals. The still-existing Maratha Light Infantry is one of the "oldest and most renowned" regiments of the Indian Army, tracing its origins to 1768.

Modern period (1857—present)

Indian martial arts underwent a period of decline after the full establishment of British colonial rule in the 19th century. More European modes of organizing kings, armies and governmental institutions, and the increasing use of firearms, gradually eroded the need for traditional combat training associated with caste-specific duties. The British colonial government banned kalaripayat in 1804 in response to a series of revolts. Silambam was also banned and became more common in the Malay Peninsula than its native Tamil Nadu. Nevertheless, traditional fighting systems persisted, sometimes even under the patronage of enthusiastic British spectators who tended to remark on the violence of native boxing and the acrobatic movements characteristic of Indian fighting styles.

The British took advantage of communities with a heavily militaristic culture, characterising them as "martial races" and employing them in the armed forces. Sikhs – already known among Indians for their martial practices – were particularly valued by the colonists as soldiers and guards, and were posted throughout not only India but Southeast Asia and other parts of the British Empire. Members of the army were allowed to box as a way of settling disputes, provided that they were still able to carry out their duties as soldiers after a match. The particular form of boxing used by the Punjabi soldiers was loh-musti, as the kara worn by Sikhs could be wielded like brass knuckles.

The resurgence of public interest in kalaripayat began in the 1920s in Tellicherry as part of a wave of rediscovery of the traditional arts throughout south India which characterised the growing reaction against British colonial rule. During the following three decades, other regional styles were subsequently revived such as silambam in Tamil Nadu, thang-ta in Manipur and paika akhada in Orissa.

Texts

Agni Purana

One of the earliest extant manual of Indian martial arts is in the Agni Purana (dated to between the 8th and the 11th century). The dhanurveda section in the Agni Purana spans chapters 248–251, categorizing weapons into thrown and unthrown classes and further divided into several sub-classes. It catalogs training into five major divisions for different types of warriors, namely charioteers, elephant-riders, horsemen, infantry, and wrestlers.

The nine asanas (stances) in the fight are listed below:

  1. samapada ("holding the feet even"): standing in closed ranks with the feet put together (248.9)
  2. vaiśākha: standing erect with the feet apart (248.10)
  3. maṇḍala ("disk"): standing with the knees apart, arranged in the shape of a flock of geese (248.11)
  4. ālīḍha ("licked, polished"): bending the right knee with the left foot pulled back (248.12)
  5. pratyālīḍha: bending the left knee with the right foot pulled back (248.13)
  6. jāta ("origin"): placing the right foot straight with the left foot perpendicular, the ankles being five fingers apart (248.14)
  7. daṇḍāyata ("extended staff"): keeping the right knee bent with the left leg straight, or vice versa; called vikaṭa ("dreadful") if the two legs are two palm-lengths apart (248.16)
  8. sampuṭa ("hemisphere") (248.17)
  9. swastika ("well-being"): keeping the feet 16 fingers apart and lifting the feet a little (248.19)

Then there follows a more detailed discussion of archery technique.

The section concludes with listing the names of actions or "deeds" possible with a number of weapons, including 32 positions to be taken with sword and shield (khaḍgacarmavidhau), 11 names of techniques of using a rope in fighting, along with 5 names of "acts in the rope operation" along with lists of "deeds" pertaining to the chakram (war-quoit), the spear, the tomara (iron club), the gada (mace), the axe, the hammer, the bhindipāla or laguda, the vajra, the dagger, the slingshot, and finally deeds with a bludgeon or cudgel. A short passage near the end of the text returns to the larger concerns of warfare and explains the various uses of war elephants and men. The text concludes with a description of how to appropriately send the well-trained fighter off to war.

Arthashastra

The Arthashastra, c. 4th century BCE, typically attributed to Chanakya chief advisor of Chandragupta Maurya is one of the earliest treatises on statecraft, including diverse topics such as economics, politics, diplomacy and military strategy.

Others

There is an extant Dhanurveda-Samhita dating to the mid-14th century, by Brhat Sarngadhara Paddhati (ed. 1888).
Other scattered references to fighting arts in medieval texts include the:
Kamandakiya Nitisara (c. 8th century ed. Manmatha Nath Dutt, 1896),
The Nitivakyamrta by Somadeva Suri (10th century),
The Yuktikalpataru of Bhoja (11th century) and
The Manasollasa of Somesvara III (12th century)

Weapons and arts

A wide array of weapons are used in the Indian subcontinent, some of which are not found anywhere else. According to P.C. Chakravati in The Art of War in Ancient India, armies used standard weapons such as wooden or metal-tipped spears, swords, thatched bamboo, wooden or metal shields, axes, short and longbows in warfare as early as the 4th century BC. Military accounts of the Gupta Empire (c. 240–480) and the later Agni Purana identify over 130 different weapons.

The Agni Purana divides weapons into thrown and unthrown classes. The thrown (mukta) class includes twelve weapons altogether which come under four categories, viz.

The katara, the most characteristic of daggers in the Indian subcontinent.
  • yantra-mukta: projectile weapons such as the sling or the bow
  • pāṇi-mukta: weapons thrown by hand such as the javelin
  • mukta-sandarita: weapons that are thrown and drawn back, such as the rope-spear
  • mantra-mukta: mythical weapons that are thrown by magic incantations (mantra), numbering 6 types

These were opposed to the much larger unthrown class of three categories.

  • hasta-śastra or amukta: melee weapons that do not leave the hand, numbering twenty types
  • muktāmukta: weapons that can be thrown or used in-close, numbering 98 varieties
  • bāhu-yuddha or bhuja-yuddha: weapons of the body, i.e. unarmed fighting

The duel with bow and arrows is considered the noblest, fighting with the spear ranks next, while fighting with the sword is considered unrefined, and wrestling is classed as the meanest or worst form of fighting. Only a Brahmin could be an acharya (teacher) of sastravidya, Kshatriya and vaishya should learn from the Acharya, while a shudra could not take a teacher, left to "fight of his own in danger".

Over time, weaponry evolved and India became famous for its flexible wootz steel. The most commonly taught weapons in the Indian martial arts today are types of swords, daggers, spears, staves, cudgels, and maces.

Weapons are linked to several superstitions and cultural beliefs in the Indian subcontinent. Drawing a weapon without reason is forbidden and considered by Hindus to be disrespectful to the goddess Chandika. Thus the saying that a sword cannot be sheathed until it has drawn blood. It was a mother's duty to tie a warrior's sword around his waist before war or a duel. In addition, she would cut her finger with the sword and make a tilak on his head from a drop of her blood. Weapons themselves were also anointed with tilak, most often from the blood of a freshly-decapitated goat (chatanga). Other taboos include looking at one's reflection in the blade, telling the price or source of acquisition, throwing it on the ground or using it for domestic purposes.

A southern two-handed sword

Swordsmanship (Khadgavidya)

Nakula and Sahadeva are said to be skilled swordsmen in Mahabharata. Sword-fighting is one of the common Indian fighting arts. Varieties include the curved single-edge sword, the straight double-edge sword, the two-handed longsword, the gauntlet-sword, and the urumi or flexible sword. Techniques differ from one state to another but all make extensive use of circular movements, often circling the weapon around the user's head. The flexible nature and lightweight of Indian swords allows for speed but provides little defensive ability, so that the swordsman must instead rely on body maneuvers to dodge attacks. Entire systems exist focusing on drawing the sword out of the opponent's body. Stances and forms traditionally made up the early training before students progress to free sparring with sticks to simulate swords in an exercise called gatka, although this term is more often used in English when referring to the Panjabi-Sikh fighting style. A common way to practice precision-cutting is to slice cloves or lemons, eventually doing so while blindfolded. Pairing two swords of equal length, though considered impractical in some parts of the world, is common and was considered highly advantageous in the Indian subcontinent.

Staffplay (Lathi khela)

Main article: Lathi khela

Stick-fighting (lathi khela) may be taught as part of a wider system like Gatka, silambam or on its own. In the Kama Sutra the sage Vātsyāyana enjoins all women to practice fighting with single-stick, quarterstaff, sword and bow and arrow in addition to the art of love-making. The stick (lathi in Prakrit) is typically made of bamboo with steel caps at the ends to prevent it from splintering. Wooden sticks made from Indian ebony may also be used. It ranges from the length of a cudgel to a staff equal to the wielder's height. The stick used during matches is covered in leather to cushion the impact. Points are awarded based on which part of the body is hit. Techniques differ from system to system, but northern styles tend to primarily use only one end of the staff for attacking while the other end is held with both hands.

Southern styles like also make use of this technique but will more often use both ends of the staff to strike. The latter is the more common method of attacking in the eastern states and Bangladesh, combined with squatting and frequent changes in height.

Spearplay

Yudhishthira is said to be a master in spearplay warfare in Mahabharata, while Shalya was also noted to be an excellent warrior in the field of spearplay. Also according to Indian Hindu myths, Murugan, the son of Lord Shiva, is said to be skilled in spear-fighting, by holding his divine spear called Vel. The Indian spear is typically made of bamboo with a steel blade. It can be used in hand-to-hand combat or thrown when the fighters are farther apart. Despite primarily being a thrusting weapon, the wide spearhead also allows for many slashing techniques. By the 17th century, Rajput mercenaries in the Mughal army were using a type of spear which integrated a pointed spear butt and a club near the head, making it similar to a mace. On the other hand, the longer cavalry spear was made of wood, with red cloth attached near the blade to prevent the opponent's blood from dripping to the shaft. The Marathas were revered for their skill of wielding a ten-foot spear called bothati (ਬੋਥਾਟੀ) from horseback. Bothati fighting is practiced with a ball-tipped lance, the end of which is covered in dye so that hits may easily be confirmed. In solo training, the spear is aimed at a pile of stones. From this was eventually developed the uniquely Indian vita which has a 5 feet (1.5 m) length of cord attached to the butt end of the weapon and tied around the spearman's wrist. Using this cord the spear can be pulled back after it has been thrown.

Archery (Dhanurvidya)

Archery is noted to be one of the noblest form of defense within Indian cultural heritage. As mentioned in Vedic literature, the bow and arrow is the most applauded weapon among Kshatriyas. Siddharta Gautama, Rama, Arjuna, Karna, Bhishma, Drona and Ekalavya were all said to be great archers.

Dhanurveda is an ancient treatise on the science of archery. It describes the practices and uses of archery, the craft of bow and arrow making, training of the army, and enumerates the rules of engagement. The treatise also discusses martial arts in relation to the training of warriors, charioteers, cavalry, elephant warriors, infantry etc. It was considered as a sin to shoot a warrior from the back and fight more than one warrior at a time. The bow used in the Vedic period were called danush, and were described in detail in the Vedas. The curved shape of the bow is called vakra in the Artha Veda. The bowstring was called jya, and was strung only when needed. An arrow was called an iṣu, and a quiver was called an iṣudhi which was slung on the back. Archers wore a hastaghna, which was an arm guard or shield usually worn on the left forearm and was used to protect the wearer from friction caused by the bowstring.

A dhanushkara was a bowyer, or the profession of bow crafting and arrow making, and it had become a regular profession by the early Vedic period. Others called jyakara specialized in making bowstrings.

Composite bows made of horn, sinew, and wood were invented in the Asian Steppes and would have been an integral part of the armory of the Aryan people. As in other civilizations such as the Hittites and Persians, the use of composite bows coincides with chariot warfare. Additionally the smaller size was of the compound bow would have made it preferable on mounted warfare.

A type of Indian longbow was five to six feet long and fired a long cane arrow with metal or bone arrow heads. The Cretan chronicler Nearchus who accompanied Alexander the Great into India, had noted that the warriors would use a bamboo bow, which had to rest on the ground and steady with the feet to draw to its full length. The arrow fired from this bamboo bow could penetrate any armor used in antiquity. The Indian long bows were described as the height of their users by Arrian, and Deccan bows in 1518 as "long like those of England".

Traditional archery is today practiced mainly in the far northern states of Ladakh and Arunachal. One sport which has persisted into the present day is thoda from Himachal Pradesh, in which a team of archers attempt to shoot blunt arrows at the legs of the opposing team.

Mace-fighting (Gadayuddha)

Bhima dueling Duryodhana

Gada (mace) is the weapon of God Hanuman in Ramayana. Lord Vishnu also carries a gada named Kaumodaki in one of his four hands. In the Mahabharata epic, the fighters Bhima, Duryodhana, Jarasandha and Balarama were said to be masters of the gada. In the mace combat, Bhima wins the final battle against Duryodhana by hitting his inner thigh. Such an attack below the waist was said to be against the etiquette of mace duels, implying a degree of commonality to this type of fighting. It was and still is used as training equipment by wrestlers. The traditional gada (mace) was essentially a wooden or steel sphere mounted on a handle and with a single spike at the top. An alternative mace-head was the lotus-shaped padam. According to the Agni Purana, the gada can be handled in twenty different ways. Due to its weight, the gada is said to be best suited to fighters with a large build or great strength. The Mughal club or mace, known as a gurj or gargaj, had a head consisting of 8–10 petal-shaped blades. Fitted with basket-hilt, a spherical pommel, and a spiked top, this type of club was designed for beating down armour-clad opponents. Alternatively, some gurj had a spiked top and a hand-guard.

Wrestling (Mallayuddha)

Main article: Malla-yuddha
Wrestling match in Bharatpur, 2013.

Grappling arts (malla-vidya), practiced either as sport or fighting style, are found throughout the Indian subcontinent. True combat-wrestling is called malla-yuddha, while the term malakhra refers to wrestling for sport. Malla-yuddha was codified into four forms which progressed from purely sportive contests of strength to actual full-contact fights known as yuddha. Due to the extreme violence, this final form is generally no longer practised. The second form, wherein the wrestlers attempt to lift each other off the ground for three seconds, persists in Karnataka. Traditional malla-yuddha is virtually extinct in the north where it has been supplanted by kusti, but another form called malakhra still exists in parts of India and Sindh, Pakistan. Vajra-musti was another old grappling art in which the competitors wrestled while wearing a horned knuckleduster. In a later style called naki ka kusti (claw wrestling), the duellists fought with bagh nakha. Numerous styles of folk wrestling are also found in India's countryside, such as mukna from Manipur, Inbuan wrestling from Mizoram and Khomlainai among the Bodos.

Wrestling (Pehlwani)

Main article: Pehlwani

Pehlwani is a form of wrestling from the Indian subcontinent. It was developed in the Mughal Empire by combining native malla-yuddha with influences from Persian varzesh-e bastani. One of the most famous practitioners of pehlwani was The Great Gama (Ghulam Mohammad Baksh Butt), who is considered one of the greatest wrestlers of all time.

Boxing (Mushtiyuddha)

Boxing (musti-yuddha) is traditionally considered the roughest form of Indian unarmed combat. In ancient times it was popular throughout northern Indian subcontinent, but is rarely practiced today. Boxers harden their fists by striking stones and other hard objects. Matches may be either one-on-one or group fights. All kinds of strikes and grabs are allowed, and any part of the body may be targeted except the groin. Another form of boxing was loh-musti (meaning "iron fist"), said to have been practiced by the God Krishna. In this variation, boxers fought while wielding a kara or steel bracelet like a knuckleduster. Grabs, kicks, biting and attacks to the groin were all legal, the only prohibition being spitting on the opponent which was considered crude and dishonourable. The kara used for regular matches was unadorned, but the form employed during war had one or more spikes around its edge. The kara may be paired with one on each hand, but it was generally only worn on one hand so the other hand could be left free. In some cases the free hand could be paired with another weapon, most commonly the bagh nakha.

Kicking

Kick-fighting (aki kiti) is the preserve of tribes from Nagaland. While the entire Naga population of northeast India and northwest Myanmar was traditionally known for their skill with broadswords (dao) and other weapons, disputes among tribesmen and between tribes were settled with a solely kick-based form of unarmed fighting. The goal is to either drive the opponent to their knees or outside of the ring. Only the feet are used to strike, and even blocking must be done with the legs.

Pugilism

Many forms of unarmed combat (bāhu-yuddha or bhuja-yuddha) incorporate too wide an array of techniques to be accurately categorized. In modern times when the carrying of weapons is no longer legal, teachers of the martial arts often emphasise the unarmed techniques as these are seen to be more practical for self-defense purposes. A warrior who fights unarmed is referred to as a bhajanh, literally meaning someone who fights with their arms. The bare-handed components of Indian fighting arts are typically based on the movements of animals, Hindu deities. Binot, a Central Indian art which focuses on defending against both armed and unarmed opponents, may be the earliest system of its kind. In the Mughal era, such fighters were known as ek-hath (lit. "one-hand"), so named because they would demonstrate their art using only one arm.

Bal Vidya

64 different types of skills and arts existed in ancient India which lead to well-developed individuals boosting their mind, body, and intellect making them capable of performing their responsibilities efficiently and effectively on personal, social and national level. Today, unhealthy and irregular lifestyles, frustrations and rising competitions in every sphere of life are affecting the health of people, especially the youth. In such a scenario, one of the ancient Indian arts referred to as "Bal Vidya" can help not only to improve the physical health but also upscale the mental and intellectual well-being of a person. A strong mind and intellect is equally important along with a strong body. Shree Aniruddha Upasana Foundation (Mumbai, India) attempts to review these ancient Indian martial arts form and provides "Bal Vidya" training to both men and women free of charge. Art forms like Mudgal Vidya, Vajra Mushthi, Surya Bhedan, Ashwa and various types of Yashwanti Malla Vidya using various weapons like Laathi (iron-bound bamboo stick), Kaathi (Pole), Fari-Gadga, Dorkhand (rope) and Dandpatta (gauntlet-sword). A book detailing all these art forms with the title "Bhartiya Prachin Bal Vidya" (The Ancient Indian Bal Art) is also available for achieving proficiency through practice post attending training sessions.

Systems

As in other respects of Indian culture, Indian martial arts can be roughly divided into northern and southern styles. The northern systems (including Pakistan and Bangladesh) may generically be referred to as shastra-vidiya, although this term is often used synonymously with gatka. The main difference is that the north was more exposed to Persianate influence during the Mughal period, while the south is more conservative in preserving ancient and medieval traditions. The exception to this rule are the northeastern states which, due to their geographic location, were closed off from most pre-European foreign invaders. As a result, northeast Indian culture and fighting methods are also closely related to that of Southeast Asia and Oceania. In addition to the major division between north and south, martial systems in the Indian subcontinent tend to be associated with certain states, cities, villages or ethnic groups.

Regional styles

Andhra Pradesh

Masters in Andhra Pradesh trace their lineage to the Vijayanagara empire, popular in Konaseema region. The native system of Chedi Talimkhana or yudhkaushalya che talim is often abbreviated to Talimkhana or simply Talim. The art makes use of several weapons which are used in preset forms. These include knife fighting (baku samu), sword fighting (katti samu), and staff fighting (kara samu) in addition to other weapons such as the gada (mace) and pata (guantlet sword).

Bengal and Northeast India

Bengali war-dances bear testament to the weapons once used in the Bengal region. Today most of these weapons are used only in choreographed fights, including dao khela (knife fighting) and fala khela (sword fighting). Traditional stick-fighting (lathi khela) is still used in free sparring today. The sticks may be short like a cudgel or a long staff. The former are sometimes paired with a shield.

Lathi khela is a traditional Bengali martial art – a kind of stick fighting practised mainly in Bengal and Northeast India. Stick fighting has an ancient history in the Indian subcontinent. Rich farmers and other eminent people hired lathial for security and as a symbol of their power. Duels were used as a way to protect or take land and other possessions. A proverb in some South Asian languages is "whoever wields the lathi keeps the cow". Zamindars (feudal lords) sent groups of lathial to forcefully collect taxes from villagers. Lathi training was at one time included in the Bratachari system of education.

Bihar

"Pari-khanda" is a fighting form created by Rajputs and is still practised in many parts of Bihar. "Pari" means shield and "khanda" means sword according "Chhau" region, therefore this art uses sword and shield for fighting. This fighting form has given birth to a local dance form named "Chhau" dance and its martial elements have been fully absorbed by this dance. It is even practised in some parts of Jharkhand and Odisha. Chhau is the name of the traditional dance- drama of the eastern regions of India and is of three types. The three forms of "Chhau" are named after the district or village where they are performed, i.e. the Purulia Chau of Bengal, the Seraikella Chau of Bihar and the Mayurbhanj Chau of Orissa.

Karnataka

The Kannada fighting arts are taught exclusively at traditional training halls or garadi mane. Disciplines include unarmed combat (kai varase), staff-fighting (kolu varase) and sword-fighting (katti varase) among various other weapons. These are most often seen today only during choreographed demonstrations at festivals.

Kashmir

Kashmiri swordsmanship is said to have an ancient history, but it was only much later that it acquired its modern name of sqay. Sqay survived a decline following the partition of India by adopting competitive methodologies of karate and taekwondo. Types of competition include sparring, breaking, and forms or khawankay. Practitioners spar using fake swords called tora which are paired with a shield. Sparring is point-based, the points being awarded for successful hits with the tora or with the foot.

Kerala
Kalaripayat stick-fighting

The Keralite martial of Kalaripayattu, came into its present form through the kalari, the local variation of the gurukula educational institution in Kerala. The most common weapons today are the staff, stick, sword, shield, spear, dagger and flexible sword, locally known as Urumi. Kerala is also home to a native form of submission wrestling called Gatta gusthi.

Maharashtra

The Marathas developed their fighting style based on the state's hilly geography. Mardani khel today teaches armed techniques for use in single combat as well as defense against several opponents. Other weapons include the sword, shield, spear, dagger, kukri, double deer horns, and bow and arrow.

Manipur

The Manipuri art of Huyen langlon was once practiced by the state's indigenous hill tribes who would engage in duels governed by strict rules of conduct. The armed component called thang-ta is named after the system's main weapons, the thang (sword) and ta (spear). Practitioners spar through cheibi gatka in which a foam sword is used together with a shield. Unarmed huyen lalong is called sarit-sarak and is used in conjunction with thang-ta when the fighter loses their weapon.

Nagaland

Aki Kiti is a semi-contact combat sport characterized by kicking and blocking solely using the soles of the feet. The word Aki Kiti means "kick fighting".

Odisha

The Odishan martial art traces back to the paika class of warriors who were particularly known for their use of the khanda or double-edge straight sword. During times of peace, the paika would hone their skills through martial dances, forms-training and various acrobatics. Their descendants have preserved these exercises in training halls called paika akhada, and demonstrate them mainly through street performances. Their method of sword training called phari-khanda is still used as the first part of the chhau dance. Other weapons include the staff and guantlet-sword.

North West India

Martial arts in northwest India and adjacent Pakistan were traditionally referred to by several terms but the most common today is shastar-vidiya or "science of edged weapons". Swordsmen practiced their techniques either in routines using real swords, or freestyle sparring with wooden sticks called gatka, a form of stick-fighting. Gatka is associated with the Sikh history and an integral part of an array of Rajput Shastar Vidiya. During the colonial period, the term gatka was extended to mean northwestern martial arts in general. Some aspects of the art, such as the unarmed techniques or fighting in armour, are today practiced almost exclusively by the Nihang order of Sikhs. Gatka incorporates several forms, each with their own set of weapons, strategies and footwork. In the late 18th century, this martial art further developed as a recreational game and University Lahore codified its rules for playing it as a game.

Tamil Nadu
சிலம்பம்
Also known asSilambattam
FocusTraditional Weapons
Country of originபாரத(தமிழ் நாடு)
CreatorGod Murugan
Olympic sportNo
Martial artSilambam

The native Tamil martial art has come to be referred to as silambam after its main weapon, the bamboo staff. Training begins with footwork patterns before progressing to stances and subsequently fighting techniques. Aside from its namesake, silambam includes a variety of weapons such as the sword, twin sticks, double deer horns, whip, sword, shield and sword, dagger, flexible sword and sickle. Unarmed silambam (kai silambam) is based on animal movements such as the snake, eagle, tiger and elephant. Other Martial Arts of Tamil Nadu are Varma Kalai, Adi Thadi, Malyutham, Valariveechu, Vaalveechu, Gusthi (Boxing form of Tamil Nadu, not to be confused with North Indian Kushti which is a Wrestling art). There are 64 various kind of arts mentioned in Tamil sangam literature and they are normally called as aayakalaigal 64 but most of them are now extinct and not in use nowadays.

Influence

Historic Indosphere cultural influence zone of Greater India for transmission of elements of Indian culture including martial arts.

With expansion of Indosphere cultural influence of Greater India, through transmission of Hinduism in Southeast Asia and the Silk Road transmission of Buddhism leading to Indianization of Southeast Asia through formation of non-Indian southeast Asian native Indianized kingdoms which adopted sanskritized language and other Indian elements such as the honorific titles, Sanskritised naming of people, Sanskritised naming of places, Sankritised institutional mottos, Sanskritised educational institute names, as well as adoption of Indian martial arts, Indian architecture, Indian music and dance, traditional Indian clothing, and Indian cuisine, a process which has also been aided by the ongoing historic expansion of Indian diaspora. The martial arts influenced by the Indian martial arts include Angampora, Ankam, Bokator, Eskrima, Krabi krabong, Kbachkun Dambong-Veng, Khmer traditional wrestling, Muay Boran, Muay Thai, Panatukan, Pencak Silat, Silat Melayu, Thaing (Burmese),Vovinam etc.

See also

South Asian

Non-South Asian

Related topics

References

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