Gymnastics
Gymnastics
The word gymnastics, the practice of which extends back thousands of years, has been used to refer to activities ranging from simple movements to extraordinary acrobatic feats. Gymnastik für die Jugend (1793), written by Johann Christoph Friedrich GutsMuths, is often cited as laying the foundations for a comprehensive system of exercises and as well as today's competitive sport. Drawing upon Jean-Jacques Rousseau, contemporary physicians, and classical sources, GutMuths (a teacher at the Schnepenthal Philanthropinum) identified three components of physical education: manual arts; social games; gymnastic exercises, which included wrestling, running, swimming, leaping, balancing, and climbing. His ideas had a considerable influence on Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, who in 1810 began meeting pupils in a wooded area near their school. There they engaged in a variety of activities that included exercising on rudimentary apparatus. Jahn's Die Deutsche Turnkunst (1816) included sections devoted to the parallel bars, vaulting, and other movements that became the core of the German system, which made extensive use of equipment. The Swedish system (designed by Per Henrik Ling in the early 1800s) used comparatively little equipment and emphasized posture, sequential progression, proper breathing, and specific exercises for each portion of the body. Its educational and medical branches were adopted, and adapted, in many countries. Debates about which system was better were often intense and continued until sports became dominant in the curriculum.
Nineteenth-century teachers could draw upon small books like James H. Smart's Manual of School Gymnastics to provide classroom calisthenic drills. Turners (members of German gymnastic societies) who arrived in the United States following the 1848 German Revolution campaigned vigorously to make German gymnastics the basis of the curriculum. Outside the schools, Turnvereins (German gymnastic societies) and Sokols (Czech gymnastic associations) organized their own events. Others held that the Swedish system, introduced into the Boston public schools in the 1890s, was more appropriate, especially for children and females. Books like Wilbur Bowen's The Teaching of Elementary School Gymnastics (1909) set forth the strengths of each. In the 1920s Danish gymnastics (which offered more variety) were introduced into the American curriculum. Some attention also was given to stunts and tumbling (such as the forward roll and the handspring).
Competitive gymnastics consists of two forms: Modern Rhythmic Gymnastics, which uses balls, hoops, and similar light equipment; and Artistic (Olympic) Gymnastics. Team competition for women took place at the 1928 Olympics, but it was not until the 1952 Games in Helsinki that individual competition began. Television coverage of the 1960 Rome Olympics resulted in an upsurge of interest in a number of countries. Following the performances of diminutive Olga Korbut in 1972 thousands of young girls in the United States joined the rapidly growing number of private gymnastic clubs and became involved in the Junior Olympic program. Gymnastics requires strength, flexibility, coordination, discipline, and willingness to practice long hours. The nature of the apparatus is such that short stature and a light body is an advantage. Both the age and size of competitive gymnasts has been decreased as the sport became more competitive. Although many youngsters enjoy the challenges, and certainly the thrill of victory, considerable concern has been expressed about the effects of intense training on their bodies and their psyches.
See also: Sports; Title IX and Girls' Sports.
bibliography
Cochrane, Tuovi Sappinen. 1968. International Gymnastics for Girls and Women. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.
Gerber, Ellen. W. 1971. Innovators and Institutions in Physical Education. Philadelphia: Lea and Febiger.
Goodbody, John. 1982. The Illustrated History of Gymnastics. London: Stanley Paul.
Ryan, Joan. 1995. Little Girls in Pretty Boxes: The Making and Breaking of Elite Gymnasts and Figure Skaters. New York: Doubleday.
internet resource
USA Gymnastics Online. Available from <www.usa-gymnastics.org>.
Roberta Park
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Ugarit und die Bibel.
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 1/1/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...and cosmopolitan Bronze Age port city of Ugarit and one of its suburbs on the coast of...core of the book treats the literature of Ugarit and Canaan, writing systems, misunderstood...Yahwistic monotheism; the Assembly of Gods at Ugarit and in the Bible; Gods, Goddesses...
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Il Libro dei morti dell'antica Ugarit: Le piu antiche testimonianze sull'Aldila prima della Bibbia.(Review)
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 10/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; Il Libro dei morti dell'antica Ugarit: Le piu antiche testimonianze sull...nor anything similar, from ancient Ugarit. With his title Massimo Baldacci assumes...series published by Piemme dedicated to Ugarit. (The first, by the same author, is...
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From Ugarit to the world
Newspaper article from: The Arab American News; 5/10/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Jandali would one day find himself in Ugarit, Syria, creating new music for the world out of the world's oldest. Ugarit is a Bronze Age city the ruins of which...the Mediterranean coast of Syria. Ugarit flourished from about 1450 to 1200...
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Textes akkadiens d'Ugarit: Textes provenant des vingt-cinq premieres campagnes.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 10/1/2003; 700+ words
; Textes akkadiens d'Ugarit: Textes provenant des vingt-cinq premieres...250 Akkadian documents from the city of Ugarit expertly translated into French by Sylvie...documents related to the internal affairs of Ugarit, the author offers us a typology of...
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The City of Ugarit at Tell Ras Shamra.
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 7/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; The City of Ugarit at Tell Ras Shamra. By MARGUERITE YON...French Mission de Ras Shamra. The City of Ugarit is divided into three chapters: "Geography...Schloen's complementary examination of Ugarit's urban makeup (The House of the Father...
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Ugarit and the Bible: Proceedings of the International Symposium on Ugarit and the Bible, Manchester, September 1992.
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 4/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...Adrian H. W. Curtis (pp. 1-10); "Ugarit and the Bible: Do They Presuppose the...of all sorts as means of learning about Ugarit rather than about Jerusalem; only when...that which pertains to the kingdom of Ugarit up to its destruction at the end of the...
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Ritual and Cult at Ugarit
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 1/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; DENNIS PARDEE, Ritual and Cult at Ugarit (SBLWAW 10; Atlanta: Society of Biblical...cuneiform texts from the ancient city of Ugarit (modern Ras Shamra) and the nearby site...Compared to the mythological poetry from Ugarit, the mundane religious practices of the...
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Die Keilalphabete: Die phonizischkanaanaischen und altarabischen Alphabete in Ugarit.
Magazine article from: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 1/1/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...held with the authors at the hospitable Ugarit-Forschung, an institute devoted to...dealing with the cuneiform alphabet of Ugarit, is devoted mostly to evaluation of previous...materials relating to the long alphabet of Ugarit are conveniently presented in two tables...
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The City of Ugarit at Tell Ras Shamra
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 7/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; MARGUERITE YON, The City of Ugarit at Tell Ras Shamra (Winona Lake...the discovery of the ancient city of Ugarit and the history of excavations. In...geography and history of the kingdom of Ugarit from the eighth millennium b.c...
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Ritual and Cult at Ugarit.(Briefly Noted)(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Currents in Theology and Mission; 4/1/2004; 493 words
; Ritual and Cult at Ugarit. By Dennis Pardee (Society of Biblical...relating to ritual at the ancient site of Ugarit (14th-13th centuries B.C.E...and the pig was not sacrificed also at Ugarit. Perhaps the biggest difference between...
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Ugarit
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ugarit , ancient city, capital of the Ugarit kingdom, W Syria, on the Mediterranean coast N of modern Latakia...established the identity of the mound as the site of ancient Ugarit. The site was been particularly rich in finds, which have...
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El
Book article from: Myths and Legends of the World
...believed to live on Mount Saphon, near the ancient Syrian city of Ugarit. A highly respected deity, El was all-knowing and all...others and involved El indirectly. For example, one story from Ugarit concerned Aqhat, son of King Danel. In return for the king...
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Baal
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...attested in the Ebla texts (first half of 2d millennium BC). By the time of the Ugarit tablets (14th cent. BC), Baal had become the ruler of the universe. The Ugarit tablets make him chief of the Canaanite pantheon. He is the source of life and...
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Ras Shamra
Book article from: A Dictionary of the Bible
Ras Shamra The modern name for the ancient Ugarit on the coast of Syria and the scene of excavations since 1928...especially interesting. Those with an alphabetic script are in Ugarit, a language akin to Hebrew, and include literary myths and...
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assembly
Book article from: A Dictionary of the Bible
...In the taunt song over Babylon , the king of Babylon is mockingly made to refer to his expectation of taking a seat among the assembly of the gods (Isa. 14: 13), located on a mountain according to the Ras Shamra texts found at Ugarit .
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