xud9a - call me zud 👍 wrote on Mar 3
rd, 2025 at 4:34pm:
My take is, it is there for a reason which is not ars gratia artis .
It is a manual, the wrestling moves are a teaching aid and it looks to me like most of the military are in groups (including the slingers) analagous to ready, aim , fire. I. E. It is also a training aid for your side and a this is how the enemy do it.
Thanks for another learning day.
What's interesting is the rest of the walls have a lot of other scenes from daily life like farming, hunting and craftspeople so I do think that is a valid interpretation. It's unknown but considering how prominent the wrestling moves are, I guess Baqet must have been a pretty avid wrestler.
Wikipedia describes it as "the world's oldest known artistic representation of an organised fighting system" which is actually how I came to find it (my thesis is based around safety in martial arts), which is really interesting.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_martial_arts#:~:text=Detail%20of%20the%20wrestling%20fresco,of%20an%20organised%20fighting%20system.