Ssireum

Ssireum
The painting titled "Sangbak" (상박; 相撲) drawn by Kim Hong-do illustrates people gathering around to watch a ssireum competition in the late 18th century.
Also known asgakjeo; gakhui; gakryeok; gakgii; chiuhui; sangbak; jaenggyo
FocusGrappling
HardnessFull-contact
Country of originKorea
CreatorUnknown
ParenthoodHistorical
Olympic sportNo
Ssireum
Hangul
Hanja
相撲, 角抵
Revised Romanizationssireum
McCune–Reischauerssirŭm

Ssireum (/ɕ͈iɾo̞m/; Korean씨름)[1] or Korean wrestling is a folk wrestling style and traditional national sport of Korea that began in the fourth century.

In the modern form each contestant wears a belt (satba) that wraps around the waist and the thigh. The competition employs a series of techniques, which inflict little harm or injury to the opponent: opponents lock on to each other's belt, and one achieves victory by bringing any part of the opponent's body above the knee to the ground.[2][3]

  1. ^ "Ssireum".
  2. ^ "What is Ssireum?". ynucc.yeungnam.ac.kr. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  3. ^ Lee, Chang W.; Leland, John (30 August 2019). "Mr. Kim's Lonely Fight to Preserve a Korean Tradition". The New York Times.

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