Topic: The Mestre's Roda - Capoeira Resources ((OOC))

Raye

Date: 2011-07-04 14:02 EST
Just as the title says this is the place for Links on Capoeira. I first learned of this discipline via the movie "Only the Strong." One of those b, Martial arts flick, but the style of the Art was unique.

So to Start off...

http://www.capoeira.com/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capoeira

Raye

Date: 2011-07-08 18:03 EST
Playing I did in Polyvore

http://embed.polyvoreimg.com/cgi/img-set/cid/33742171/id/sM7ubK2p4BGCsY6Fq2kGnw/size/e.jpg

Raye

Date: 2011-08-14 16:31 EST
http://eclipsedancer.com/gallery/albums/10001/Doc.jpg

Raye

Date: 2011-08-18 20:30 EST
The Doctor is in the house.

http://eclipsedancer.com/gallery/albums/10001/Doc1.jpg

Raye

Date: 2011-08-19 19:43 EST
Origins

In the 16th century Portugal had one of the biggest colonial empires of the world, but it lacked people to actually colonize it. In the Brazilian colony the Portuguese, like many other European colonists, opted to use slavery to supply this shortage of workers. Colonists tried to enslave Brazilian natives in the beginning, but this quickly proved too difficult for many reasons, including the familiarity natives had with the land. The solution was importing slaves from Africa.

In its first century the main economic activity in the colony was the production and processing of sugarcane. Portuguese colonists used to create large sugarcane farms called engenhos, farms which extensively used enslaved workers. Slaves, living in inhumane and humiliating conditions, were forced to work hard and often suffered physical punishment for any small misbehavior. Even though slaves outnumbered the Portuguese colonists, the lack of weapons, the colonial law, the disagreement among slaves coming from different African cultures and their complete lack of knowledge about the land and its surroundings would usually discourage the idea of a rebellion.

In this environment Capoeira began to develop. More than a fighting style, it was created as a hope of survival, a tool with which an escaped slave, completely unequipped, could survive in the hostile, unknown land and face the hunt of the capit?es-do-mato, colonial agents in charge of finding escapees, always armed and mounted.

Capoeira nowadays is not only a martial art or a small aspect of Brazilian society, but an active exporter of Brazilian culture all over the world. Since the 1970s masters of the art form began to emigrate and teach capoeira in the United States and other countries. Present in many countries in every continent, every year Capoeira attracts to Brazil thousands of foreign students and, often, foreign capoeiristas work hard to learn the official Brazilian language, Portuguese, in an effort to better understand and become part of the art. Renowned Capoeira Masters are often invited to teach abroad or even establish their own schools. Capoeira presentations, normally theatrical, acrobatic and with little martiality, are common sights in the whole world.

Raye

Date: 2012-01-20 21:14 EST
http://www.d1autremonde.com/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ep3MhThqHQ&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XiyENUL_kA&feature=related