Naban
Naban or Burmese fight with the body with body
Definition
Art of combat of IIIesiècle, it was transformed today into sporting fight with the body with body. Certain ethnos groups of the Myanmar made their popular sport of it, it is the case of the Arakanais (or Rakhines ). This martial practice belongs since the XXe century to a unit called Thaing .The Burmese fight (naban) allows, as for it, a complete approach of work on the ground and body with body, with the training of the techniques of projection, control (fixed assets) and tender (keys, strangulations, points of pressure, crushings, pinchings, quarterings…). It is a very physical activity, which constitutes the logical continuation of the combat halfway.
Internal bonds
- Burmese Martial arts, Thaing
- Bando, Banshay
- Lethwei, Bando-kickboxing, Burmese Boxing
- Bando-yoga, Min-zin, Pongyi-thaing
See too
- Ba Than (Gyi), Manual off the Bando disciplines , National Bando Association, Burma, 1946-68
- Maung Gyi, Bando, philosophy, principles and practice , STI edition, 2000
- Maung Gyi, Burmese bando boxing , ED. R.Maxwell, Understanding Baltimore, 1978
- Gift F.Draeger and Robert W.Smith, Asian Fighting arts , E. Kodansha, Tokyo, 1969
- Zoran Rebac, Traditional burmese boxing , ED. Paladin Near, Boulder, 2003
External bonds
- Fédération (French) of Bando Boxes Burmese - a mine of information on an effective discipline multimillénaire and hyper
- Fédération of North America de Bando (the USA)
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