Banot | |
Focus: | Weapons (sticks) |
Country: | Canary Islands Spain |
Olympic: | No |
Spanish; Castilian: Juego del palo or banot (pronounced as /es/, game of the stick; banod) is a traditional martial art/folk sport of stick-fighting practiced in the Canary Islands.[1] [2] It involves the combative use of a slender stick from 4feetto6feetft (toft) long, wielded in both hands, and characterised by fluid motion in attacks and defences.
Though similar stick fighting techniques are present in the Iberian peninsula (e.g. Portuguese and Galician Portuguese: [[jogo do pau]]), the origins of Spanish; Castilian: juego del palo may be traced back to the Guanches, the indigenous people of the Canary Islands in pre-colonial times during the early 15th century. A Spanish engineer named Leonardo Torriani wrote a history of the Canary Islands in 1590 and included a record of early Spanish; Castilian: juego del palo, accompanied by an illustration of two Guanche warriors performing a type of ritual combat with short staves in a small arena. Torriani wrote;
"When two Canarians went to duel, they met at a special place established for this purpose. It was a small enclosure with a level, raised stone platform at each end. To begin, they each stood upon a platform, armed with three of the smooth throwing stones they call tahuas, and also with the stick called magodo or amodeghe. Then they dodged the stones as they were thrown, skillfully twisting their bodies without moving their feet. Next, they stepped down and fenced with the staves, each one trying to gain advantage over the other, as is our custom also."
The art has been maintained through to the present day, undergoing a particular renaissance during the 1970s as part of a general effort to maintain native Canarian folk traditions. It bears resemblance to the Portuguese martial art Portuguese: jogo do pau and the Venezuelan form Spanish; Castilian: [[juego del garrote]].
Spanish; Castilian: Juego del palo is now a popular sports activity in the Canaries and has been the subject of considerable academic interest as well, with a number of professional conferences having been held at local universities to investigate the history, culture, and technique of the art.
This may be described as a form of stick fencing between two players that is characterized by the spontaneous interplay of attacking techniques and defense techniques. No protective equipment is worn in traditional juego del palo; safety is maintained through the skilled control of attacks, which are restrained rather than being made with full force upon the opponent's body.
Juego del palo is divided into a number of specific styles or local traditions that have been developed on particular islands within the archipelago, and/or by particular families. The nine primary styles practiced in modern Spanish; Castilian: juego del palo include (mostly named after founders of the styles): Deniz, Morales, Verga, Acosta, Quintero, Vidal, Confiero, Spanish; Castilian: juego del garrote ('game of the club') and Spanish; Castilian: juego de la lata ('game of the tin'). Each style is distinguished from the others by specific fighting techniques and strategies, and also by the rules under which it is played as a competitive game.