Also known as | Kun L'Bokator |
---|---|
Focus | Striking, grappling, wrestling, ground fighting,[1] weaponry |
Hardness | Full-contact |
Country of origin | Cambodia |
Famous practitioners | San Kim Sean (Grandmaster), Tharoth Sam, Nang Sovan, Chan Rothana |
Descendant arts | Kun Khmer[2] |
Kun Lbokator, traditional martial arts in Cambodia | |
---|---|
Country | Cambodia |
Reference | 01868 |
Region | Asia and the Pacific |
Inscription history | |
Inscription | 2022 (17th session) |
List | Representative |
Bokator (Khmer: ល្បុក្កតោ, lbŏkkâtaô [lɓokatao]) or Kun L'bokator (គុនល្បុក្កតោ, kun lbŏkkâtaô [kun lɓokatao], lit. 'the art of pounding the lion') is an ancient Cambodian battlefield martial art. It is one of the oldest fighting systems existing in the world[3] and is recognised as intangible cultural heritage by the UNESCO.[4]
Oral tradition indicates that Bokator (or an early form thereof) was the close-quarter combat system used by the ancient Cambodian armies before the founding of Angkor. The martial art encompasses hand-to-hand, wrestling and weapon techniques.[5]
taipeitimes
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Kim says it combines the key elements of a variety of forms of the discipline. "We've got empty-hand forms, animal forms (mimicking an attacking animal), grappling, wrestling," he said. It also incorporates the use of hand-to-hand combat and weapons. "Basically, it's a complete system of ancient martial arts style," said Kim, a 2013 graduate of Hunter High School.