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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Clanad's right: boxing and wrestling are martial arts; if you want to include weapons, so is duelling with rapiers etc. Oriental ones are the only ones where you get to fly through the air the way they do in the movies, though.
Still... a particular form, or forms, of hand-to-hand combat does seem to have been developed in the Far East and nowhere else; and I don't know why.
Where as in the west the development of guns, particuarly hand guns meant that being able to punch or diable somebody at close quarters became less relevant, because you woul be lying in a pool of blood way before you got close enough to do any damage.
Martial arts, often referred to as fighting systems, are systems of codified practices and traditions of training for combat, usually without the use of guns and other modern weapons. Today, people study martial arts for various reasons including sport, fitness, self-defense, self-cultivation (meditation), mental discipline & character development, and self-confidence.
"Martial arts" was translated in 1920 in Takenobu's Japanese-English Dictionary from Japanese bu-gei or bu-jutsu: "the craft/accomplishment of military affairs". This definition is translated directly from the Chinese term, wushu, literally, "martial art", meaning all manner of Chinese martial arts.
This term is slightly anomalous in its English usage. Its strict meaning should be "arts for military use" (flying fighter aircraft, sniper training, and so forth) but in normal usage it is used to refer to formalized systems of training to fight without modern technology.
As mentioned above, traditionally boxing, wrestling, archery and fencing were also 'martial arts' that have been turned into a sporting activity, rather than their former necessity.