
In
India, dehvada or the body-way is defined as "one of
the ways to full realisation." In the day and age of the Rig-Veda,
Ramayana and Mahabharata men of stature and
circumstance were expected to be competent in chariot-racing,
archery, horsemanship, military tactics, wrestling,
weight-lifting, swimming and huntingThe guru-shishya (teacher-pupil) relationship has always been an integral part of Indian sport from time immemorial. Indian sport reached a peak of excellence when Buddhism held sway here. In Villas Mani Majra, Tiruvedacharya describes many fascinating games, namely, archery, equitation, hammer-throwing and chariot-racing. In Manas Olhas (1135 A.D.), Someshwar writes about bhrashram (weight-lifting), bhramanshram (walking) and also about Mall-Stambha (wrestling). It is more than likely that many of today's Olympic disciplines are sophisticated versions of the games of strength and speed that flourished in ancient India and Greece. Chess, wrestling, polo, archery and hockey (possibly a fall-out from polo) are some of the games believed to have originated in India.
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