Thursday, December 11, 2008

Competitive Bodybuilding: A Time Line Through the Past

By Courtney Hayes

"Strong Man Acts" moved to North America in the 1800's and are credited with inspiring what is known today as bodybuilding. In that day, a strongman meant someone who displayed his physical prowess, ordinarily as a circus stunt man. If you wanted to see a strongman performance, including bench pressing, steel bending and breaking iron chains, you would have to go to the circus. Although bodybuilding did not yet exist, many 19th century strongmen had well-built bodies and even sold photographs of themselves flexing and posing. Nowadays, the term strongman refers to competitors in assorted strength competitions (besides making your muscles big enough to entertain the thought of lifting rocks, trucks or rolling massive tires around).

Using a combination of different exercises to develop physique and muscle fiber is what is referred to as bodybuilding. (mainly weight training) and diet. However, not every bodybuilder is in it for the competition. This sport involves displaying pronounced muscle tone, exaggerated muscle mass and muscle definition before a panel of judges, who assign points to competing bodybuilders based on their aesthetic appearance.

Relatively new sport of competitive bodybuilding are presented below,the principal landmarks in the development of it.

* Even though there were a couple of weightlifting competitions in the very first Olympiad of the modern era in 1896, modern bodybuilding truly started with Eugene Sandow, a Prussian who came up with many of the current bodybuilding techniques in addition to many of the original bodybuilding machines for the public. (tension bands, machined dumbbells etc).

* Sandow put together the very first bodybuilding contest called the Great Competition in September of 1901, staged at London's Royal Albert Hall. The Great Ziegfeld, tells some of the story of the beginning of modern bodybuilding and the 1936 Oscar winning film, Sandow's manager was Florenz Ziegfeld.

The Grecian Ideal was a term used to describe the perfect physique as represented in the classical proportions of ancient Greek and Roman statues, during Sandow's time. Competitors were scored based on how closely they matched these proportions during the early days of competitive bodybuilding. Sandow used these standards to develop his own physique.

* The North American equivalent to Sandow was a gentleman whose name was Bernarr Macfadden. Macfadden put forth a great deal of effort to increase his strength (when he was younger he was often ill and weak), he got his start through selling exercise equipment. Women's fitness was also something he believed in. (a novel idea at the time). His magazine, Women's Physical Development, was first published in 1900. Shortly thereafter,it was renamed Beauty and Health. Macfadden established a number of healthatoriums (institutions that provided physical educational programs) all over the eastern and mid-western United States.

* On January 16, 1904, Macfadden sponsored the first large-scale bodybuilding competition in the U.S of New York City's Madison Square Garden. They called it a "Physique Conest" and a "Physique Competition." (rather than athletic feats, weightlifting contests or strength displays) was the focus of the show. The award of "The Most Perfectly Developed Man in the World" went to contestant Al Treloar. The notable Charles Adams in 1921 and 1922 acquired fame as did other several participants in later Macfadden bodybuilding competitions.

* The initial significant worldwide bodybuilding contest was the Mr. Universe competition, established in 1947, then the Mr. Olympian contest that was in 1965.

The period between 1940 and 1970 is known as the Golden Age of bodybuilding because this is when the criterion of more muscle mass was added to the ideal bodybuilder aesthetic, along with the existing criteria of muscular symmetry and definition. World War II is often sited as the chief reason towards the growth of larger, powerful, boldly assertive attitudes. The 1977 film, Pumping Iron, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger also gave bodybuilding added publicity.

* Bodybuilding competitions for women began in the 1970s (however a small number of ladies had been participants in previous competitions put together by Macfadden in America)

* The International Olympic Committee granted provisional status to the sport of competitive bodybuilding in 1998 but has not yet approved it.

* With advancements in technology, bodybuilders are more massive today than they have ever been. Many competitors in today's bodybuilding competitions weigh over 250 pounds and have less than 5% body fat.

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