Saturday, June 15, 2019

Deepika Kumari-THE INDIAN ARCHER

DEEPIKA KUMARI


Deepika Kumari (born 13 June 1994) is an Indian athlete who competes in the event of archery, is currently ranked World No. 5, and is a former world number one.[2][3] She won a gold medal in the 2010 Commonwealth games in the women's individual recurve event. She also won a gold medal in the same competition in the women's team recurve event along with Dola Banerjee and Bombayala Devi.[4]


Kumari qualified for the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where she competed in the Women's Individual and Women's teamevents, finishing in eighth place in the latter.[5]
She was conferred the Arjuna Award, India's second highest sporting award in the year 2012 by President of India Pranab Mukherjee.[6] In February 2014, she was honored with FICCI Sportsperson of the Year Award.[7] The Government of India awarded her the civilian honour of the Padma Shri in 2016.[8]

History of ARCHERY

ANCIENT ARCHERS
Archery is one of the oldest arts still practised today. The evolution of archery began at the start of mankind’s history, and evidence of ancient archers has been found around the world.
Although archery probably dates back to the Stone Age – around 20,000BC – the earliest people known to have regularly used bows and arrows were the Ancient Egyptians, who adopted archery around 3,000BC for hunting and warfare.
In China, the earliest evidence of archery dates to the Shang Dynasty – 1766-1027BC. A war chariot of that time carried a three-man team, a driver, a lancer and an archer. During the Zhou (Chou) Dynasty that followed – 1027-256BC – nobles at court attended archery tournaments that were accompanied my music and interspersed with entertainment.
CHINESE ARCHERS
When Chinese people introduced Japan to archery in the sixth century it had an overwhelming influence on culture.
One of Japan’s most well-known martial arts, originally known as “kyujutsu” (the art of the bow), is known as “kyudo” (the way of the bow). Modern kyudo is practised primarily for physical, moral and spiritual development. After certain ritual movements, a kyudo archer steps onto the shooting line to shoot at a target 36cm in diamter, 28 metres away, set in a roofed bank of sand. The kyudo bow is 2.21 metres long and made of laminated strips of bamboo.
In the Greco-Roman period, archers in both warfare and hunting settings were frequently shown on pottery.
Middle Eastern superiority in archery equipment and technique reigned for centuries. With bows like those of the Assyrians and Parthians, who were probably the first to master archery from horseback, Attila the Hun and his Mongols conquered much of Europe and Asia, and Turkish archers threw back the Crusaders.