Brother, very informative video, thank you. And we call Nawatawut as Dahjuj in Assam, a state of India, which means ten weapons. We include the shoulders.
@@oz1erol839 It is hard to tell cause we were not a part of India untill British took our land and merged it with their Indian colony in 1826. Geographically, culturally and historically we are more close to South East asia than Indian subcontinent. You may search North East India on Google or youtube for more informations.
@@oz1erol839It is hard to tell cause we were not a part of India untill British took our land and merged it with their Indian colony in 1826. Geographically, culturally and historically we are more close to South East asia than Indian subcontinent. You may search North East India on Google or youtube for more informations.
It is hard to tell cause we were not a part of India untill British took our land and merged it with their Indian colony in 1826. Geographically, culturally and historically we are more close to South East asia than Indian subcontinent. You may search North East India on Google or youtube for more informations.
@@leonardobleda6699 No more Educational Videos about Muay Boran, for a while at least. I said everything I know, there will be blog posts to complement the info. I will focus on tutorials in the following months
Fun fact: Before 1928 the original "Muay" was declined in popularity through Thailand's westernization. Muay was being replaced by western boxing so the word "Muay" in that time was vaguely more referring to western boxing. In order to save the original "Muay" from extinction there was a renovation by adapting the rules and some training/competition conventions from western boxing into it. That's where the word "Muay" was separated into 2 divisions: "Muay Thai" for the original Muay of Thai people and "Muay Sakol" (meaning international boxing) for the western boxing.
Addition (forgot to mention at first): Since the "Muay Thai" wasn't anymore the truly traditional "Muay" because it was adapted to comply western boxing. And there were many "Muay" schools still practicing the original arts of their lineage. Save the adapted "Muay Thai", the other "Muay"s of Thailand were added the prefix word "Boran" (from Sanskrit, meaning ancient) and become "Muay Boran" as we seen today.
@@GaawutProductions also not gonna lie my master told me muay boran is just for shows and you cant use any of this techniques I think i need change my master, anyway in my country you cant find any good masters who teach you wisdoms and philosophical things behind material arts, they just teach you half of whatever their master teached them, they know nothing about material arts.
Not likely. Not much resemblance at all. Along with local traditions, some of the unarmed Silambam from the Chola period could be an influence, so could Pare Khand from Orissa. Both from regions with historical trade routes to SE Asia. Muay Thai and Lethwei in general are influenced by Musthi Yuddha.
@@Oo_Shade_oO Thailand being where it is, it's very likely for both influences. Malaysia was heavily influenced by south india, even islam predominantly came through south india not the arabs
Kung full also had some influences probably. I recently did a deep dive on the origins of sun wu Kong and whether he was derived from hanuman, and it's more likely than not. So it's possible Kung fu and most martial arts that were developed around India, had Kalaripayattu as the foundation
@@Oo_Shade_oO We still practice it in Assam, we call it Bahujuj. There were two different styles also present here and we call them Maljuj and Dabarajuj . People still practice very secretly for various reasons. I hope it will come to the surface in some 10 to 20 years.
Ong bak was amazing opened so many eyes to Muay Thai or boran loved that movie
Anderson Silva said he practice his elbow uppercut after watching ong bak
I've seen them all. I love Tony Jaa. But its ofcourse a movie. So the technics are a lot Muay Boran but with a big element of show ofcourse 😊
@@oz1erol839 I know still great tho
@@tomdobbs2733 yes for sure 😎
Great video, thanks for sharing it!
The heart of fighting is knowing how hard to kick or punch and when to hit hard and when not to, when one master that that person will never be hit...
Brother, very informative video, thank you. And we call Nawatawut as Dahjuj in Assam, a state of India, which means ten weapons. We include the shoulders.
So the shoulder technique comes from india ?
@@oz1erol839 It is hard to tell cause we were not a part of India untill British took our land and merged it with their Indian colony in 1826. Geographically, culturally and historically we are more close to South East asia than Indian subcontinent. You may search North East India on Google or youtube for more informations.
@@oz1erol839It is hard to tell cause we were not a part of India untill British took our land and merged it with their Indian colony in 1826. Geographically, culturally and historically we are more close to South East asia than Indian subcontinent. You may search North East India on Google or youtube for more informations.
It is hard to tell cause we were not a part of India untill British took our land and merged it with their Indian colony in 1826. Geographically, culturally and historically we are more close to South East asia than Indian subcontinent. You may search North East India on Google or youtube for more informations.
It's surely been a while since your last video. Could we get a sneak peek on what's next?
@@leonardobleda6699 No more Educational Videos about Muay Boran, for a while at least.
I said everything I know, there will be blog posts to complement the info.
I will focus on tutorials in the following months
@@GaawutProductions Okay, mate
Fun fact: Before 1928 the original "Muay" was declined in popularity through Thailand's westernization. Muay was being replaced by western boxing so the word "Muay" in that time was vaguely more referring to western boxing. In order to save the original "Muay" from extinction there was a renovation by adapting the rules and some training/competition conventions from western boxing into it. That's where the word "Muay" was separated into 2 divisions: "Muay Thai" for the original Muay of Thai people and "Muay Sakol" (meaning international boxing) for the western boxing.
Addition (forgot to mention at first): Since the "Muay Thai" wasn't anymore the truly traditional "Muay" because it was adapted to comply western boxing. And there were many "Muay" schools still practicing the original arts of their lineage. Save the adapted "Muay Thai", the other "Muay"s of Thailand were added the prefix word "Boran" (from Sanskrit, meaning ancient) and become "Muay Boran" as we seen today.
Awesome❤
💪🏽💪🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
Kru, where did you find the picture of that illustration of wrestling?
@@Vinzvillarico Which minute?
@@GaawutProductions 4:16
Hi, do you also train Muay Boran alone?
@@eullerdiniz8597 muay wong luang yes
I want sub thai please
Bro do you know where we can learn muay boran!?
@@Slow_Rule It depends where you live, otherwise there are online courses like mine.
@@GaawutProductions where in thailand!?
@@Slow_Rule Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Nakhon Ratchasima, Surat Thani, and other places. It depends on which style you want to learn.
@@GaawutProductions all of them if i ever enter thailand anyway thanks
@@GaawutProductions also not gonna lie my master told me muay boran is just for shows and you cant use any of this techniques
I think i need change my master, anyway in my country you cant find any good masters who teach you wisdoms and philosophical things behind material arts, they just teach you half of whatever their master teached them, they know nothing about material arts.
Kalaripayattu from south india influenced muay boran and other asian martial arts
Not likely. Not much resemblance at all. Along with local traditions, some of the unarmed Silambam from the Chola period could be an influence, so could Pare Khand from Orissa. Both from regions with historical trade routes to SE Asia. Muay Thai and Lethwei in general are influenced by Musthi Yuddha.
@@Oo_Shade_oO Thailand being where it is, it's very likely for both influences. Malaysia was heavily influenced by south india, even islam predominantly came through south india not the arabs
Kung full also had some influences probably. I recently did a deep dive on the origins of sun wu Kong and whether he was derived from hanuman, and it's more likely than not. So it's possible Kung fu and most martial arts that were developed around India, had Kalaripayattu as the foundation
Kalaripayuttu itslef is a new martial art. It born under the influence of nationalism. Don't know why people lie about it.
@@Oo_Shade_oO We still practice it in Assam, we call it Bahujuj. There were two different styles also present here and we call them Maljuj and Dabarajuj . People still practice very secretly for various reasons. I hope it will come to the surface in some 10 to 20 years.