The sport of wushu is both an exhibition and a full-contact sport derived from traditional Chinese martial arts. It was developed in China after 1949, in an effort to standardize the practice of traditional Chinese martial arts, although attempts to structure the various decentralized martial arts traditions date back earlier, when the Central Guoshu Institute was established at Nanking in 1928. The term wushu is Chinese for "martial arts" (武 "Wu" = military or martial, 术 "Shu" = art). In contemporary times, wushu has become an international sport through the International Wushu Federation (IWUF), which holds the World Wushu Championships every two years; the first World Championships were held in 1991 in Beijing and won by Yuan Wen Qing.
Competitive wushu is composed of two disciplines: taolu (套路; forms) and sanda (散打; sparring). Taolu involve martial art
patterns and maneuvers for which competitors are judged and given
points according to specific rules. The forms comprise basic movements
(stances, kicks, punches, balances, jumps, sweeps and throws) based on
aggregate categories of traditional Chinese martial art styles and can
be changed for competitions to highlight one's strengths. Competitive
forms have time limits that can range from 1 minute, 20 seconds for some
external styles to over five minutes for internal styles. Modern wushu
competitors are increasingly training in aerial techniques such as 540
and 720 and even 900 degree jumps and kicks to add more difficulty and
style to their forms.
Sanda (sometimes called sanshou or Lei tai) is a modern fighting method and sport influenced by traditional Chinese boxing, Chinese wrestling methods called Shuai jiao and other Chinese grappling techniques such as Chin Na. It has all the combat aspects of wushu. Sanda appears much like Kickboxing or Muay Thai, but includes many more grappling techniques. Sanda fighting competitions are often held alongside taolu or form competitions.
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