The
earliest records of Martial Arts practice in Korea date back to
about 50 B.C. These earliest forms of korean martial arts are
known as 'Taek Kyon'. Evidence that Martial Arts were being
practiced at that time can be found in
tombs where wall-paintings
show two men in fighting-stance. Others reject this evidence and
say that these men could be simply dancing.
Back then, time there were three
kingdoms:
Koguryo (37 B.C. - 668 A.D.)
Paekje (18 B.C. - 600 A.D.)
Silla (57 B.C. - 935 A.D.)
Taekwondo
WTF athem:
Silla unified the kingdoms after winning the war against Paekje in
660 A.D. and Koguryo in 668 A.D. The Hwa Rang Do played an
important role at this unification. The Hwa Rang Do was an elite
group of young noble men, devoted to cultivating mind and body and
serve the kingdom Silla. The best translation for HwaRang would
probably be "flowering youth" (Hwa ="flower",
Rang="young man"). The HwaRang Do had an honor-code and
practiced various forms of martial arts, including Taekyon and Soo
Bakh Do. The old honor-code of the HwaRang is the philosophical
background of modern Taekwondo.
What followed was a time of peace
and the HwaRang turned from a military organization to a group
specialized in poetry and music. It was in 936 A.D. when Wang Kon
founded the Koryo dynasty, an abbreviation of Koguryo. The name
Korea is derived from Koryo.
During the Koryo Dynasty the
sport Soo Bakh Do, which was then used as a military training
method, became popular. During the Joseon-dynasty (also known as
the Yi-dynasty. 1392 A.D. - 1910 A.D.) this emphasis on military
training disappeared. King Taejo, founder of the Joseon-dynasty,
replaced Buddhism by Confucianism as the state religion. According
to Confucianism, the higher class should study the poets, read
poems and and play music. Martial arts was something for the
common, or even inferior, man.
Modern-day Taekwondo is
influenced by many other Martial Arts. The most important of these
arts is Japanese Karate. This is because Japan dominated Korea
during 1910 until the end of World War II. During WWII, lots of
Korean soldiers were trained in Japan. During this occupation of
Korea, the Japanese tried to erase all traces of the Korean
culture, including the martial arts. The influence that Japan has
given to Taekwondo are the quick, lineair movements, that
characterize the various Japanese systems.
After World War II, when Korea
became independant, several kwans arose. These kwans were:
Chung Do Kwan
Moo Duk Kwan
Yun Moo Kwan
Chang Moo Kwan
Oh Do Kwan
Ji Do Kwan
Chi Do Kwan
Song Moo Kwan
The Kwans united in 1955 as Tae Soo Do. In the beginning of 1957,
the name Taekwondo was adopted by several Korean martial arts
masters, for its similarity to the name Tae Kyon.
General Choi Hong-hi required the
army to train Taekwondo, so the very first Taekwondo students were
Korean soldiers. The police and air force had to learn Taekwondo
as well. At that time, Taekwondo was merely a Korean version of
Shotokan Karate. In 1961 the Korean Taekwondo Union arose from the
Soo Bakh Do Association and the Tae Soo Do Association. In 1962
the Korean Amateur Sports Association acknowledged the Korean
Taekwondo Union and in 1965 the name was changed to Korean
Taekwondo Association (K.T.A.). General Choi was president of the
K.T.A. at that time and was asked to start the I.T.F. as the
international branch of the K.T.A. The southern government was
overthrown in 1961. General Choi Hong-hi left for America and
established I.T.F. (International Taekwondo Federation) Taekwondo,
as a separate entity, two years later.
Demonstrations
were given all over the world. It took a while before real
progress was made, but eventually, in 1973, the World Taekwondo
Federation (W.T.F.) was founded. In 1980, W.T.F. Taekwondo was
recognized by the International Olympic Commitee (I.O.C.) and
became a demonstration sport at the Olympics in 1988. In the year
2000 taekwondo made its debute as an official olympic sport. There
were several attempts to unify I.T.F. and W.T.F. Taekwondo, but
unfortunately, these failed.
K.T.A.
In the year 2000 taekwondo made
its debute as an official olympic sport. Taken from a post in
the dojang-digest
Dr. Un Yong Kim became the 5th
President of the KTA in 1971. Dr. Kim subsequently became the 1st
and only President of the WTF in 1973 and around 1990 he gave up
the post of KTA President.
Mr. Choi, Sae-Chang became the
6th KTA President after Dr. Kim stepped down due to his expanded
responsibilities in the International Sports community. Mr. Choi
was a former four star general in the ROK Army and also held the
post of Defense Minister. Mr. Choi was replaced by Mr. Rhee, Pil
Gon in 1996.
The KTA is alive and well and
probably is the largest, most active NGB for Taekwondo in the
world. For more information, you can write to the KTA at the
following address:
The Korea Taekwondo Association
#607, Olympic Center
88 Oryoon-dong, Songpa-ku
Seoul, Korea
Telephone: 420-4271
Fax: 420-4274
I.T.F. vs W.T.F.
As mentioned earlier, Gen. Choi
established ITF-Taekwondo (which practices a more traditional form
of taekwondo) while WTF-Taekwondo (which has a strong emphasis on
sparring) became an olympic sport in 2000.
A good-will trip to North-Korea
in 1966 caused General Choi to fall in disgrace in the eyes of the
South-Koreans. Choi resigned as president of the K.T.A. and
founded the I.T.F. on March, the 22nd of that same year. The
headquarters of ITF were established in Canada.
ITF started concentrating on the
forms developed by General Choi, while the KTA (which later, on
May 28, 1973, became the WTF) concentrated on the Palgwe's. Later
the WTF abandoned the Palgwe's and started concentrating on
Taeguks. Slowly, the WTF emphasis turned to sparring. This is also
the reason why a lot of people rather call (WTF) Taekwondo a
martial sport than a Martial Art.
The American Taekwondo
Association (ATA) is a smaller organization, and has many
similarities to the ITF. The ATA has a copyright on the forms of
the organization, so these forms cannot be used on competitions by
non-members. There are many organizations, but the three mentioned
above have the most members.
ITF practices the so-called
'semi-contact' part of Taekwondo, while WTF practices the
so-called 'full-contact' part. ITF focuses more on the traditional
way of taekwondo. Since the break-up, there have been many
attempts to reunite WTF and ITF, so-far without success. There
probably will never be a union within Taekwondo.
Copyright (c) 1994-2003 by Barry
Nauta (barry@nauta.be, http://www.barrel.net or
http://www.nauta.be). Permission is granted to copy, distribute
and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free
Documentation License, Version 1.1 or any later version published
by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no
Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license
is included in the section entitled "Copyleft"