Montag, 14. Juli 2014

IRON AGE - John Grimek, the unbeaten hero of iron pumping.

Hey dear readers, here it is the third post of the IRON AGE posting series and with this the third post dedicated totally to Old School Bodybuilding and its heroes and champs up here on your dear "MANSLAUGHTER THUG LIFE" blog up on Blogspot. And so, here it is, the third post of this very posting series. We started  the IRON AGE posting series with a big post about the "History of Bodybuilding" from then to now, from its early and earliest beginnings to more or less our present days and age and that very post, the first IRON AGE one, also included a short and loose running order of the  topics of the posts of this posting series, at least the main posts. with tribute posts and what the hell may ever else added up to this. After this already just a few hours or a day or so later next up came a honour paying tribute post to the almighty Eugen Sandow, the godfather of modern Bodybuilding. And next up and this means now will be and is this very one up here, a honour paying tribute post to honour no one else than the great John Grimek, a if not the legendary Strongman and early modern Bodybuilder that dominated the 1930's and 1940's and that remained unbeaten his career over and became with this a legend and an icon of its very own, the man just known as Grimek!!! Personally one of THE three very BEST ever Bodybuilders of all times for/to me, clearly and without a single doubt, point and fact, and he is in the best community with Bill Pearl and Arnold Schwarzenegger being his solely comrades in this category. So, you see, something BIG and this means ONE of the BIGGEST is now coming finally at you, so pay respect and give honour to the almighty Grimek, and hopefully you'll enjoy the reading of this very post. And now really enough of this small talking introducing words, and now let us get into the roll of things...!!!

THE MAN WHO DOMINATED THE OLD WORLD OF IRON & STEEL...

- JOHN GRIMEK -

...AND REMAINED FOREVER UNBEATEN & UNRIVALED BY ANY MEANS!!!

John Grimek (his full name was John Carroll Grimek) was born at the 17th of June in 1910, fifteen years before the founding father of modern Bodybuilding Eugen Sandow should die, in Perth Amboy, New Jersey/U.S.A. as a son to the Slovak immigrants George and Maria Grimek, who originally came or were from the village Ústienad Oravou in the western Slovakia, (Eastern) Europe. He was the man who dominated his era, the 1930's and 1940's, in such an impressive dominat way like it afterwards him only did Arnold Schwarzenegger, Lee Haney, Dorian Yates, and Ronnie Coleman. And he was something that even not many if anyhow anyone of the named ones had been: Unbeaten. And so, if you want to say it so, unrivaled in his days. And this was and is something not many can archieve, and it makes the big and great John Grimek even more stick out of the crowd of all the rest outta there (then and now). This alone gives him a place of his very own up here on this very blog and also and especially (maybe even more important) in the history of Bodybuilding as well as Iron Sports in general (and I'm pretty damn sure that this is more important, maybe just a little single bit, but definitely more important anyhow anyway...). And so here it is, the right and more than justified place for him up here, John Grimek, the (unbeaten and unrivaled) King of Muscles, and I will try to give you an insight view in his knowledge, try to display Grimeks wisdom and share it here and now with you, my dear interested readers. I will try to do this post a littlebit different then the usual posts paying tribute to Bodybuilders or other people/persons in general that I have done so far up here all more or less in a strict chronological biographical way to keep it fresh and shake it a little bit up right now. Okay, onward with this very article posting here and now.

John Grimek was sort of a prototype of an allround iron and strength athlete that moved between Bodybuilding, Strongmen, and Powerlifting whose first aim it was to build muscles to gain strength and I mean real strength and power and while doing so John Grimek sculpted his body in a impressive way and transformed through hard work one hell of an tremendous and- again- impressive physique. And that behind this muscular and aestehtic sculpted body a lot of power and impressive strength was hidden- okay, look at the pictures, as if John Grimek was anything hiding from the world, right...- Grimek proofed on many occasions, and this was all done through and through pure natural. (Unneccesary to say that also Eugen Sandow build his body through and through in a pure natural way.) John Grimek definitely gained and earned and worked his ass off to get it of the best developed bodies with the best ever physique in the history of our sport(s), if you need a proof just take a look at the pictures and keep in mind that this are shots from a now a days pretty long gone era, the 1930's and 1940's of the 20th century. (In a few years these pictures will be around one hundred years old.) He was one of a kind, a man of a category not many are able to reach to fit and fill in, he stands in one row with the likes of Eugen Sandow, Bill Pearl as well as Arnold Schwarzenegger. And like these three great ones if not greatest he was also not only a great athlete but also a great person beside the sports with a lot of emptahy, loyalty, love, trust, and altruism for his family, friends, fans, and fellow men in general. A real personality. A man with great muscles, but also by far greater beside his muscles. He was passionated and evoted, dedicated to the sport, but exactly the same way to his family  and friends and also his fans, too. With answering all the fan mail that was send to him personal in a time when stuff like Facebook, E-Mail, What's-App, Twitter, Instagram, and all this stuff weren't even dawning at the horizon shows alone what his fans meant to him. With working hard physical jobs to earn money to make his and his family's living beside heavy work outs and intense training and doing competitions and shows and being then also a loving and considerate father and husband tells even far more about what a great one John Grimek has been. Beside being a great if not the greatest athlete of his time, and this he surely and definitely was: the unrivaled and unbeaten greatest athlete of his time and one of the greatest ones overall, and being a emptahic father, husband, and fellow men in general, he was also a hard working blue collar working class man and also a author in several Bodybuilding and Fitness and Iron & Strength Sports magazines of his time, like for example for "Strength & Health", "Muscular Development", and also the infamous "MuscleMag" for and in which he had and wrote his legendary column "Grimeks wisdom".

Okay, after this general kept words to pay honour to him, the almighty and legendary John Grimek, it's now time to go deeper into his training, work outs, and also his nutrition and competition history. That leads us to something that puts him also equal to the likes of Eugen Sandow and Arnold Schwarzenegger as well as for example also Reg Park (to name another and probably more popular respectively better than John Grimek known Bodybuilding and Iron & Strength sports legend and icon of the great old days), and that was the fact that John Grimek used to train constantly very hard and even more heavier and incredible intense. This he did pretty much right from the start off in his early days as an iron pumping strength athlete. Not at least because the then very famous Bodybuilder and especially Strongman George F. Jowett, really also a true legend of his very own and one of the big old Greats (read here for more informations about him: http://www.sandowplus.co.uk/Competition/Jowett/jowindex.htm; as well as here: http://www.sandowplus.co.uk/Competition/Jowett/jowettbiog.htm you will find also more about and to him), gave him in his young aged days the good and friendly advice to work out and train as hard and intense and to lift and press and curl and squat as heavy as only anyhow anyway possible. And so John Grimek tried and succeed, conquered, and heavily convinced by it he stayed with and sticked true to it, and just take a look at the photos respectively pictures of him, John Grimek, and you will know that that was and is (and probably forever will be) the one and only true real deal. Convinced by it. Sticked with it. Today one might say: "Go hard or go home!" And surely also: "No pain, no gain!" So it was back then in the days of John Grimek, and so it remained over all the decades and so it is still today. But that's another story, I guess, and so back to the topic. George F. Jowett opened his incredible full box of work out wisdom and iron culture knowledge to John Grimek, and Grimek took some good healthy portions out of it and so he did for example use massive chains that were hanging from the ceiling of the work out premises and heavy 1.000 pounds weights for lifting work outs, first and foremost to get a good sense of touch for and of such ultra heavy weights, not at least so that later on in his work out and training practises the dumbbells and handles will feel much more easier to and for him, so that over short or long he would be able to lift more and more and heavier and heavier without his centrically nervous system would crush down under the enormous exposure, load, and stress caused by such ultra intense and über heavy work outs like John Grimek cultivated them back in his days. Beside this John Grimek also used to experiment with several different techniques, methods, and assistance stuff and mechanics from which he expected benefits for his work outs and the benefits he wanted to gain with and get out of them. In most cases this experiments ended sooner or later with broken chains and other things he used as instruments to push his work outs and with them himself further and father on ended up broken and destroyed. And even some of his work out techniques and training assistances might seem pretty quixotic and swashbuckling by looking at them from today on pretty much all of them had been very accurate anticipations of things to come, things that we know and use today, they were fetch-aheads of our modern work out techniques like for example the glorious Rack or Powerrack for practises with a retrenched loaded radius of animation movement or excercise. John Grimek really was full of wisdom and damn much ahead of his time, a true pioneer and a truly smart one and a really hard worker, too. And beside this all he was also a incredible empathic and apologetic fellow men with a big heart and a passionate soul and farseeing mind. And beside this also a intelligent analyst with all the consequences that result out of this. And this leads us to the next counterfoil of this tribute post.

John Grimek as the intelligent and thoughtful analyist that he was all of his life concentrated heavily on the analysis of the glorious demonstrations of strength and power that the old warhorses and well-reputated veterans of the iron sports of his days like Louis Cyr, Hermann Gröner, Warren Lincoln Travis, and his good friend Sig Klein (the man who made him known to and with dumbbells) once showed and demonstrated in a dominant way, and to gain wisdom and with this benefits for and an advantage for his work outs and with this his whole body, instead of doing weirds feasts of strength up on the stages of his time just to get the ordinary crowd going nuts and his ego being fondled. But once and only for this one time he started thinking back and forth to go on stage in one of this early Strongmen shows and compete with and against Warren Lincoln Travis (read right on here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Lincoln_Travis - as well as here: http://www.usawa.com/lift-that-killed-worlds-strongest-man/; for more informations about him) who challenged him to a competition. But finally John Grimek turned the challenged offered to him down. He surely could beat Warren Lincoln Travis at nearly any part of the competition but the weight lifting with fingers and teeth simply were to weird and too dangerous in his perception, and this for many good and true and justified reasons, for sure. But his experience with hurting his fingers badly when he did finger weight lifting with 135 kilogram what caused a aback of his iron pumping training in general and the destiny of the back then very famous polish born early 20th century Strongman Joseph L. Greenstein a.k.a. "The Mighty Atom" (read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Greenstein - and/or also here: http://www.j-grit.com/athletes-the-mighty-atom-strongman.php; if you want to know more about him) who totally ruined his health and especially his teeth and mouth with doing stuff like lifting weights and bending iron bars and biting nails in two halfs with them and was finally forced to eat nothing else than soup because he wasn't able to chomp anything else anymore in a proper way made him turn down the offer or challenge of Travis. When it came to pumping iron and lifting, squatting, pressing, and curling weights John Grimek was even he was strong like a machine never the cleanest and most precise and most correct and best technical skilled athlete. There were times when he could lift when he was doing repots with one arm nearly the same weight as with two arms, the same is to say about frontpushes or explosive weight liftings up from the ground at which in particular he did used his back in a extremely leaned to the back way. And it is sure and proof or save to say that it had been this missing technical skills and the knowledge of or about them what stood in his way to make himself a name in the department of the Olympic Weight Lifting. But that he made good for with other triumphs. So he became the New Jersey Heavyweight Champion in 1934 when he did frontpushes with 110 kilogram and established with doing this so back then a new american record. Also with doing one armed pushes with 80 kilogram he did so as well, with establishing a new american record back then. Later on with weighing 85 kilogram he improved his record in/of doing frontpushes from 110 kilogram to 115 kilogram and established with doing so a new american record again. In 1936 with weighing 82 kilogram he again improved this record and established a new one with doing frontpushes with 118 kilogram. With doing this in 1936 he gained the first place at the AAU (= "Amateur Athletic Union") qualifications for the Olmypian Games in Berlin in 1936. But unfortunately due to his above already mentioned and described lack of technical skills and the knowledge of and experience with and in it he did not that good in Berlin with the very, very most of his tries ended up as disqualifications due to technical irregularities. But one thing he was anyhow for sure, the by far most muscular man and one of the strongest also up there on stage, point and fact. Like every athlete no matter if an iron athlete or any other ordinary athlete also John Grimek had his favorite exercises in which he was skilled and reputated best, and in the case of John Grimek it was for sure the Deadlift in which he was the king. Without warming up he was able to do deadlifts with 270 kilogram and while doing this he nearly let his legs remained totally  racked and he used the complete radius of the movement of the exercise, he was really that double-jointed. And it was for sure not at least his impressive and enormous flexibility that proofed that you don't automatically become a meatheaded muscleman when you do iron pumping. Around this time he was weighing around 89 kilogram and was able to carry out one handed dumbbell pushes over his head with 65 kilogram dumbbells, with using his two arms and hands he could do the same exercise with 165 kilogram, technically clean the first repetition, with a impulse the second repetition, and with doing it with drive the third repetition. At the 21st of February of the year of 1940 he was challenging Karl Norberg a 48 years old giant and a docker in a inofficial but very well documented competition and John Grimek curled nothing less than a 127 kilogram weighing barbell, holding it with a reverse grasp or grip, and then he also lifted the 127 kilogram weighing barbell over his head, still holding it with this reverse grip. Impressive!!! Pretty often John Grimek used to lift and curl also two dumbbells with one hand via holding them athwart and wedged in one hand. His best capacity in doing this had been a 40 kilogram dumbbell together with a 38 kilogram dumbbell. Also he lifted the legendary "Louis Cyr" dumbbell that weighed 112 kilogram and he could lift this monster one handed and one armed from one side of his body straight over his head. (Louis Cyr was canadian born and one of the most famous and most legendary and strongest Strongman of the late 19th and the early 20th century, and if you want to know more about him then check for example this link here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Cyr and also http://www.sandowplus.co.uk/Competition/Cyr/cyr-biog.htm to finally know more about the one man who was crowned to be the strongest man who have ever lived and this by no one else than the legendary Ben Weider.) With a barbell his best accomplishment in or with this exercise were 120 kilogram. He also liked one armed dumbbell swings and managed to carry this exercises out with 90 kilogram. To prove his endurance he carried out squats with doing 40 squat repetitions with 180 kilogram loaded on his back, 101 repetitions in doing frontpushes while standing with 90 kilogram and 65 repetitions of angular bench presses with two 30 kilogram dumbbells - all repetitions carried out one after another. Impressive!!! In 1940 he archieved a record, a world record, when he was doing front pushes with 118,5 kilogram when he was weighing just 82 kilogram. And in New York in the Madison Square Garden he pushed 130 kilogram, he pulled 113 kilogram, and he bumped 147,5 kilogram. For a time he was one of the very few weightlifters worldwide who was able to rival and even to beat in that time the legendary John Davis (read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Davis_(weightlifter) for more about him) who conquered six olympic gold medals and two over-all olympic victories, one in 1948 and one in 1952. For his squats John Grimek was also very famous and well-known and highly reputated. In one legged squats he squatted 90 kilogram and in standard two legged squats impressive 317,5 kilogram. When doing jump squats or jumping squats he was able to do eight repetitions with 90 kilogram loaded up on his back.

Since John Grimek died in 1998 being 88 years old here and there some tried to denounce his impressive strength, but without any kind of success because liars and lies in some cases really can't do damage to the truth. John Grimek simply was so incredible far ahead of all his potential rivals of his time and also so far ahead of his time in general that he surely was and still remain unrivaled and unbeaten for all times. With being just 1,75 meter tall he build up with and through hard, dedicated, and passionated work and full-value nutrition tremendous big muscles and they grew on over all the years. For example his arms that grew on to having a ambit or extent of 48 centimeter. (In his time and age 43 centimeter were a giant ambit of arms.) And his triumph in Bodybuilding to what he finally moved on to he gained when he was working hard and being a dedicated father and husband as well, nothing easy to accomplish and that makes him even greater. And he never backed down, knew no defeat and no surrender. He was also totally in control of his msucles and he loved to demonstrate dominating feasts of strength. Beside this he was also very acrobatic and agile and could for example easily do flips and splits, as well as he was able to do and demonstrate the "human flag", to name you just some examples of how agile and acrobatic and in control of his body and msucles he really was. He also worked out once as a adagios dancer and also posed once for the "Tarzan" comic and was also in the short list for the role of Superman in a "Superman" movie. John Grimeks main motivation was especially to train for himself and for the consistent amelioration of his body, and not to train for competitions. Simply because back then it was more or less impossible to gain monetary success out of the iron sports to make a living out of and with it, especially as a family father and especially when you don't wanted to ruin sooner or later your physical health with it like a lot of the early Strongman sportsmen of the late 19th and the early 20th century unfortunately did in one or another. But for sure he also felt the hunger to go and compete and mess with the best of his time in several categories of the iron sports. And so he moved finally also into Bodybuilding and did championships and flexed his impressive muscles up on stage. He did six Bodybuilding competitions and not the smallest ones and he won them all in a unrivaled triumphant victorious way and this clearly even against world top first class opposition like for example the legendary and groundbreaking Steve Reeves who was defeated by John Grimek two times, in 1948 at the NABBA "Mr. Universe" championship and in 1949 at the "Mr. U.S.A." championship. Here are the championships he did and won in a decade beside working a hard day time real life job and being an empathic father and a loving husband:
1939 = "York Perfect Man"
1940 = "AAU Mr. America" (At where he was also crowned the victor in the categories "The best arms" and "The most muscular man".)
1941 = "AAU Mr. America"
1946 = "Most Muscular Man in America"
1948 = "NABBA Mr. Universe"
1949 = "Mr. U.S.A."
The 1948's "NABBA Mr. Universe" took place at the 13th of August of the year of 1948 in London, together with the Olympic Games, and was perhaps the first real through and through multinational Bodybuilding competition on a international/global professional level ever, with the athletes coming from 16 countries and with all in all 43 competitors at all.  After his win of the 1949 "Mr. U.S.A." championship he declared his farewell from the world of the active prize fighting sport. All in all you can easily say that John Grimek was confronted with at least 75 of the very best Bodybuilders of the U.S.A. as well as of the rest of the world (especially in the case of the "NABBA Mr. Universe" championship) including Steve Reeves, Steve Stanko, Clarence Ross, George Eiferman, and Armand Tanny, and you know what,  he defeated them all. Even when in the world of todays Pro Bodybuilding the gaged size of muscles isn't really of interest anymore, what is no wonder with all these monstrous by/with steroids and growth hormons and what the hell else ever fueled and pumped up to the max mutant muscle sizes that we see everywhere today,  however, back then in the days of John Grimek this all was a little bit different, and the gaged size of muscles really meant something back then. And to know this gaged sizes is anyhow pretty beneficial if you want to get a good imagination or impression of the body of a Bodybuilder. And even this gaged size of msucles changes with the body weight of a man or woman, and this was also in the case of John Grimek so what should be no wonder to anyone, we will now have a look at his average gaged muscle size with his average body weight of 88 kilogram. Linked to this John Grimek showed this muscle ambits:
- Chest = over 119,5 centimeter
- Waist = 79 centimeter
- Femoral = 66 centimeter
- Calves = 46 centimeter
- Arms = 44,5 centimeter
- Neck = 43 centimeter
- Forearms = 36,5 centimeter
Very impressive numbers, and all pure and natural, and everyone really into iron sports no matter if Bodybuilding, Powerlifting, Strongmen, or (Olympic) Weightlifting knows this and knows how hard the way to such sizes is, especially the true and natural way, what is still the real deal after all.

Now we will have a look at the nutrition and training or working out the John Grimek style and way. First we will have a look at his nutrition. It based on three short rules:
(1.) Plain!!!
(2.) Easy!!!
(3.) Effective!!!
He was blessed with an enormous appetite and hunger and a whole complete chockerel was for him just a little snack, and eggs had a first-rate place in his nutrition. He loved coffee and avoided alcohol at any occasions. Any proper nutrition supplementation was something John Grimek could just dream of and so the only supplements he knew of and he used had been the homemade protein cakes of his beloved wife. He controlled his body weight simply with reducing or adding calories to his daily meal plan, what means that he reduced his meals or added meals to his daily or weekly nutrition. Plain, easy, effective - and it worked and still works, and today even better and even easier with a great and rich nutrition supplement bargain being on the market.

Now we will have a good luck at John Grimeks training principles and techniques. He used to train and work out when- and whereever he just could, but his favorite gym had been for sure the old York gym, and his work outs had been through and through 100% authentic, all just done because of the honest pleasure of pure strength. He analysed and improved the old feasts of strength of the well-served iron sports warhorses of his time and before his time and after he loved the challenge he usually decided without any real contrived preparation to participate in all the Strongmen, Weight Lifting, and Bodybuilding competitions. He usually did heavy, very heavy, really heavy flotation exercises, maybe less than six and all in just one workout, he used the very well known and also very well established pyramid concept of weights and sets, with the account or number of the sets he did depended on his current level of exhaustion. He concentrated especially for example on deadlifts and squads. After it was back then still a pretty new exercise he did only here and there from time to time some benchpress. And also when this exercise became more and more reputated, known, and carried out he sticked with not doing it that often after all. This because he thought that to build strength in the whole body the exercises had to be done while standing, and that whole body strength was his first aim. Also he thought that the benchpress would lead to "manboobs" when it would be done too often, and so he sticked with doing it only here and there from time to time. That it was not a matter of strength should be clear, not at least because he benchpressed 180 kilogram. But he always did chest presses with dumbbells and coatings with dumbbells and barbells as well, to build up a broad and massive and powerful chest. He usually did them between his squat sets in a way of a early "super set system" for the legs and the chest, and not at least to also use this "time of exhaustion" between his squat sets in a use- and senseful way and to let his lungs work up to the maximum. His exercises usually consisted out of six to seven sets of squats with coatings with just one breath per rep, power convert, and frontpushes. The amount of sets he exalted by instinct. He did also deadlifts in various forms and also obviated rowing, as well as dumbbell training for his biceps, triceps, and shoulders. When he changed his work out schedule he simply made some alternatives to his flotations. On his rest days or better "rest days" he used to practise some more unusual exercises like lateral leaned barbell pushes (the old form of the one armed pushes), one armed wrenching, and dumbbell swings. Exercises for the strength of the grip of his hands he did normally as well, like for example the gripping and lifting of two assembled together weight discs with one hand or the holding of big and heavy weight discs with just one of his fingers. And this program and nutrition and dedication to the iron way of life lead him to become the unrivaled and unbeaten champ that he is and forever will be. So forget about all the trendy up to date stuff, if you want to work out really heavy and really hard and gain real results in strength and muscle size then just try the John Grimek way and style of training and nutrition if you can stand it. And don't forget: keep it plain, keep it easy, keep it effective!!! And also don't forget: What worked out (long) before steroids and such stuff will also work in the times of and if you somehow might think so also with steroids and stuff like this and it will still work after steroids and all the other stuff out there. Ah, and in 1999 John Grimek became a member of the "IFBB Hall of Fame", and this more than ''just'' deserved, point and fact!!!
Nothing left to say, but just:
R.I.P John Grimek, the unbeaten and unrivaled King of the Iron and one of THE greatest of ALL times.


That's it for the third post of the IRON AGE posting series up here on this very blog. I hope you enjoyed it, and if you want to know when the next round will be coming up... can't say it, so don't ask it. Anyhow, just stay tuned for more up here and maybe already in the soon future more will be coming for you up here. So far already thanks for your time and interest, in short: Thanks for reading!!!
Stick to the iron, and keep on pumping!!!
Your dear Manslaughter Andy.

Donnerstag, 10. Juli 2014

IRON AGE - Eugen Sandow @ "Muscle Display"

Hey dear readers, here it is, now  you get already the second post of the IRON AGE posting series up here on your dear "MANSLAUGHTER THUG LIFE" blog, and for all of you outta there who should have missed out on this recently started posting series up here just let me say that  this once was meant to become the first ever "theme days" posting series up here before I decided to hand this idea out and down to the grave even before it was born for reasons that I explained within the introduction words of the first post of the IRON AGE series that dealt with the history of Bodybuilding. Ah, and latest now you also know the topic of this posting series: Bodybuilding. Old School Bodybuilding. Like it or not, get used to it, period. And after this first post started with a try or better with the ambition to give you a overview over the History of Bodybuilding from way back then up into present times this now following very one here will be also a through and through historical post with paying tribute to the larger than life almighty godfather and founding father and iconic legend respectively legendary icon of modern Bodybuilding, paying tribute to the man after whom the most important title trophy of todays Bodybuilding is named, paying tribute to the one man who more than any other else brought the building of the human body through heavy excerices with lifting weights and pumping iron back to life and glory finally again at the end of the 19th century, the man who would have been the bringer of light for Bodybuilding, and also of Strongmen and Powerlifting sports, the one and only Eugen Sandow. Now just gimme a freaking fucking "Hell Yeah!!!" and so then now let's fucking roll!!!

FROM OUT OF THE COLD DEPHTS OF PRUSSIA...

- EUGEN SANDOW -

...INTO THE GLORIOUS HALLS OF IRON & STEEL!!!

The godfather of modern Bodybuilding as well as Strongmen and Powerlifting was born at the 2nd of April of the year 1867 in Königsberg, Prussia (today better known as Kaliningrad, Russia). His real name was Friedrich Wilhelm Müller and he should become more than just famous over all this decades as the father of modern Bodybuilding. He was born a son to a russian mother and a german father. While it's hard (and maybe not that interesting and entertaining after all) to figure out what he had done in his early years we know for sure and well proofed that at or with the age of 18 years he left his family and his home and turned his back on Königsberg and Prussia a. k. (today) a. Kaliningrad, Russia for the simple reason to avoid military services and he soon became a circus athlete to earn money to do his living and he started to tour old mother Europe doing his duties and earning his money to pay his living as a circus athlete. That was also the time (and the reason) when and why he finally adopted his new nick name Eugen Sandow (or Eugene Sandow) and used it as his pseudonym and artist as well as stage name. In 1889 Eugen Sandow traveled to London to hit the stage there, and with jumping on the stage he participated in a contest of what we could describe as a early Strongmen competition and he soon gained massive amounts of fame and recognition for his impressive strength that he showed and proofed with and through his performance(s) live on stage. And this show in 1889 in London was the launch off and starting point for the carreer of Eugen Sandow as becoming a - which means THE - famous strength athletic superstart of his time. (And with a immortal legacy and myth that became larger than himself and his life, forever immortalized.) In the aftermath of this Strongmen show in 1889 in London and becoming a superstar especially in the United Kingdom he received large amounts of requests to perform live on stage from all over Britain. For the time period of the next circa four years he worked out hard and trained intense to cultivate and refine his technique and technical skills and he made it in a really impressive way into the world of popular entertainment of his time with doing and delivering great grapping posing shows and prooving his strength with impressive feats of strength live up on stage. This demonstrations of superior physical human strength in various forms that even included lifting up a whole horse at once had been strongly the focus point of his early european shows and you can surely say that with them Eugen Sandow was one of the inventors, pioneers and creating godfathers of todays modern Strongmen sports. Especially in Britain he was already a superstar and his fame made it to the rest of the old world as well as finally to the shores of the new world, too. And in 1893, just four years after his breakthrough, the interest of the new world became more and more alive.

It was Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr. who was the first who wanted to bring Sandow live up on stage in the United States of America. He planned out to do so in 1893 at the "World's Columbian Exposition" in the windy city of Chicago, Illionis/U.S.A. and started working on the fullfillment of this plans so that it would work out. Eugen Sandow was back then under contract to Maurice Grau. Grau and Ziegfeld made their deal, and while Grau primarly wanted to be paid 1.000 $ a week Ziegfeld didn't know if he could effort that much and after hard negotiations both agreed on the deal of 10% of the gross receipts being payed to Grau by Ziegfeld in the end. It was also no one else than Ziegfeld himself who recognized that the audience in the United States of America was by far more interested in the strong and big and aesthetical muscles and the show of them of Eugen Sandow than by him lifting tremendous amounts of weights and so Ziegfeld came up with the idea of Sandow doing live on stage ''just'' bulging and flexing muscles poses instead of lifting heavy and heavier and even the heaviest weights. Ziegfeld named this poses "Muscle Display Performances" and succeeded in convincing Sandow to do this poses as his show. And so Eugen Sandow added this bulging muscle poses displays to his live show repertoire with performing impressive feats of strength with barbells. The cooperation between Sandow and Ziegfeld was very ferile and so Sandow beside the new bulging muscles poses displays also added other new ''colourful displays'' of muscles and strength to his live shows like breaking chains that are wrapped around his chest with the flexing of his muslces, and the audience cheered up to it heavily and enthusiastically. Eugen Sandow very soon became the biggest star under contract to Florenz Ziegfeld. So with some good doses of inspirations from and by Florenz Ziegfeld the mighty Eugen Sandow moved on from being what is easy to say one of the pioneers and godfathers of what we today know as being Strongmen sports to the pioneer and inventor of modern Bodybuilding with including more and more display poses of him flexing his muscles into his show and then making them more and more and step by step to the center point of his shows, even his shows had always been mixed up shows of early modern Bodybuilding and early modern Strongmen sports with the flexing muscles Bodybuilding poses soon more and more gaining the biggest interest by/from the first back then especially U.S. audience, and with doing this he became the first modern Bodybuilder and one of the greatest of all times. The shows he did and developed together with Ziegfeld became soon known as and under the name of "Muscle Display" shows and should become one of the founding stones of his undying legacy that still lives on today. Soon after his first triumphs in the United States of America then already in 1894, just one year after he hit the new world, Eugen Sandow had been the center point of a short Kinetoscope (see here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinetoscope for more informations about it) film or movie about him, "Sandow", as well as a short film series was done about him, consisting out of parts of his shows and focussing especially on him flexing his muscles and not really that much on his feasts of strength delivered up there on stage. Both became pretty big commercial victories and especially the short film series centered on his flexing muscle poses showparts and also gained a lot of reputance in the history of cinema and movie, especially also from a aesthetical standpoint. During this he was still or again, like you may want to see and name it, on tour through out the United States of America, when he made a short return to England to marry Blanche Brooks from Manchester, with whom he should have two daughters named Helen and Lorraine, but soon after this short return he should return permanently due to tremendous stress and ill health to recuperate from this.

He should more or less pretty soon get well from this again and back on his feet he took the chances he earned with gaining and earning glory, fame, and some fiscal/monetary health and he created and opened up the doors to and of his first "Institute of Physical Culture", to teach with and through it methods of exercise, dietary habits, and succesful weight training methods. His ideas on physical fitness and his ideals of it had been very novel at that time and had a very strong and big impact. The in short Sandow Institute named and titled institute was an early Gymnasium and it was open for the public for exercises, with a big influence. Then in 1898 Eugen Sandow founded a monthly periodical that was originally named "Physical Culture" and which was subsequently named "Sandow's Magazine of Physical Culture" that was dedicated to all suspects of physical culture: diet and nutrition, training and exercise, posing and competition. This monthly periodical was soon backed up by books that Eugen Sandow wrote and published between 1897 and 1904 and with the last of this books carried the term "Bodybuilding" (more or less instead of the term of "Physical Culture" that was used by Eugen Sandow before the term "Bodybuilding" became known and famous) in their titles. Eugen Sandow also worked hard on and at improving the then known and used exercise equipment. In 1900 William Bankier (see here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Bankier for more informations about or on him) wrote his famous book "Ideal Physical Culture". With the release of this book he tried to step up as a bitter rival of Eugen Sandow with challenging him in and with his book to a contest in weightlifting, wrestling, running, and jumping. But Eugen Sandow turned down this offensive competition and challenge by William Bankier and he also did not care about the fact that he was then named a coward, a charlatan, and a liar by him. It was simple and easy, Eugen Sandow had bigger things in the making to care about: In 1901 he organized the first ever modern Bodybuilding competition named "The Great Competition". It held place in London's Royal Albert Hall and the venue was so full of people that people were turned away at the doors, such a giant public success it was back then. Three judges were presiding over the championship contest, and this had been Sir Charles Lawes as the sculptor, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (yes, THE Sir Arthur Conan Doyle!!!) as the author, and no one else than the almighty Eugen Sandow himself. Beside all of this he also traveled all over and all around the world to tour to and through many various countries including also Australia and New Zealand, India, South Africa, and also Japan to promote the idea and ideal of Physical Culture a.k.a. Bodybuilding. Also he was designated as the special instructor in Physical Culture of and to the King Edward the VII. in 1911. And like already said or written he was married to Blanche Brooks and was father to his two daughters Helen and Lorraine.

In Sandow's life and work and world of thoughts and ideas something was incredible important for him and he worked out hard to come as close to it as anyhow possible for him and this takes us back to the old ancient Greeks and the very early beginnings of Bodybuilding: The Grecian Ideal. Eugen Sandow's resemblance of physiques that were found on ancient old sculptures of Greece and Rome was tremendous and definitely no accident while he measured the old statues in famous and not so famous museums and helped heavily and strongly to develop what was and shall become known as the Grecian Ideal as some sort of a formula for the perfect physique of or for a human body. And Eugen Sandow himself became pretty much a living role model for or of this Grecian Ideal as the perfect physique, when he worked out and formed his body and physique to the exact perfect proportions of his Grecian Ideal. And this is also not at least one great important reason and factor why he is named and crowned the father of (modern) Bodybuilding, for or as being one of the very first strength or iron athletes to intentionally develop his musculature to pre-determined dimensions. Eugen Sandow laid out specific prescriptions of weights, repitions, and methods in order to archieve his ideal proportions known as the Grecian Ideal, he did so for example in his books "Strength and how to obtain it" as well as "Sandow's System of Physical Training".

Eugen Sandow should die in London on the 14th of October in 1925 of a stroke at the age of being 58 years old. He was then buried in an unmarked grave in Putney Vale Cemetery as it was requested  of his wife Blanche Brooks. Then in 2002 a grave stone with a black marble plague had been placed on the grave of Eugen Sandow by the author Thomas Manly, a admirer of the almighty and immortal Eugen Sandow. The inscription on the gravestone is kept and held in golden letters and speaks the words of "EUGEN SANDOW, 1867 - 1925 the Father of Bodybuilding". Sandow's great-great-grandson Chris Davies then bought or purchased the grave place of Eugen Sandow in 2008. The items that had been placed some years before by Thomas Manly had been replaced for the anniversary of Eugen Sandow's birth that year and also a new gravestone monument had been placed on the grave. It is a one and a half ton natural pink sandstone monolith. The grave stone carries the short and simple inscription of "SANDOW" written vertically, as a reference to the ancient Greek funeral or funerary monuments known under the name of Steles (read, for example, here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stele if you want to know more about it).

The legacy of Eugen Sandow is immortal and enormous, and so now just some short words in general or general kept about it, also to show the reputance and influence and impact that Eugen Sandow easily had. He was befriended by King George the V., Thomas Edison, and the great and also immortal Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (the man we all have to thank for all eternities for the creation of the infamous larger than life Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson), as well as by the classical pianist Martinus Sieveking, and was portrayed by the actor Nat Pendleton in the Academy Award winning film or movie "The great Ziegfeld" in 1936. Also in or on an episode of the Venture Bros. (read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Venture_Bros., if you want to know more) Eugen Sandow was portrayed and displayed as the Bodyguard of the main character's great-great-grandfather. In or as recognition of or for his contribution(s) to the sports and world of Bodybuilding Frederick Pomeroy scuplted a bronze statue of Eugen Sandow, and it's simply known as "The Sandow" and is presented to the winner of the annual "Mister Olympia" competition of the IFBB, held in this form or way since 1977 (but started far earlier, but to that we will come later on in this posting series), which is the biggest and most influential and most important as well as most reputated Bodybuilding championship competition of today and in general of modern and especially today's Bodybuilding. Also in the world of today's sports entertainment professional wrestling Eugen Sandow got payed tribute by Wilhelm Baumann (read here:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Sandow for some informations about this pro wrestling legend) of the infamous Gold Dust Trio (read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_Dust_Trio in case you want to know more about it) who adopted the name Billy Sandow as his ring name in honour and as a tribute to Eugen Sandow. Sort of nearly a century later the current WWE pro wrestler and superstar Damien Sandow adopted this name as his ring name in honour of or tribute to Billy Sandow and with this also indirectly in honour of and as a tribute to Eugen Sandow. Beside Eugen Sandow only few or better not that many others of the great ones of real iron and strength sports were payed this honour. One of them was one of Eugen Sandow's contemporaries the great Stanislaus Zbyszko (read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanislaus_Zbyszko for more informations about this great old one), whose name decades later on was used as a tribute to him adopted by the WWE pro wrestler and superstar Lawrence Whistler who should become famous especially for his feud against Bruno Sammartino in the 1980's under his ring name of Larry Zbyszko. (But that's also another story...)

Like above already written Eugen Sandow was also a pretty active author back at his time and in his time. Not to talk about his very own "Sandow's Magazine on Physical Training" he wrote and published plenty of books, and here's a list of the titles of the books written and published by Eugen Sandow:
- "SANDOW'S SYSTEM ON PHYSICAL TRAINING"
- "STRENGTH AND HOW TO OBTAIN IT"
- "BODY-BUILDING"
- "STRENGTH AND HEALTH"
- "LIFE IS MOVEMENT"
- "THE CONSTRUCTION AND RECONSTRUCTION OF THE HUMAN BODY"
And, like one or two times already written, not to forget about Eugen Sandow's monthly periodically magazine of the name and title of "SANDOW'S MAGAZINE ON PHYSICAL TRAINING".
Here's a link to a site totally dedictaed to Eugen Sandow and the likes of him past and present, strength athletes and iron sportsmen, Physical Culture and early modern Bodybuilding fanatics, done for them, done by some of them, in short a site totally dedicated to Iron Men. And so, if you are interested in more of this then check out the site by clicking on this very link http://www.sandowplus.co.uk/indexnew.htm here and start an enjoyable online reading session.
This is all about the father and the immortal icon of modern Bodybuilding Friedrich Wilhelm Müller from out of Königsberg in Prussia who should become by far more famous under his artist and later on working name of Eugen Sandow, the creator of modern Bodybuilding and his once sort of old grecian ideas inspired aesthetic ideals. A great man who deserves all the honour!!!
R.I.P. Eugen Sandow, 1867 - 1925, rest in peace, father of Bodybuilding.


I hope you enjoyed this history lesson in Bodybuilding and tribute to its GREAT, GREAT inventor, the man who founded the IRON AGE, no one else than Eugen Sandow. Next stuff is already in the pipeline (also ''normal'' posts, so calm down, you can trust me upon this;-)............), so stay tuned and pumped up ready just right for it. And so long thanks for your time and interest and stay tuned for more to come. /// Andy

Mittwoch, 9. Juli 2014

IRON AGE - The History of Bodybuilding

INTRODUCTION: Hey folks, dear readers, finally it's time if not even about time for me to bring this finally up. (And I don't mean that because again a full month without any real activity and not to talk about frequency passed us all by now already, hm, but maybe also because of this, at least a little bit, too, for sure.) What once was planned to be released up here as the first ever so called Posting Series (a week or several days in a row completly and solely dedicated to one specific topic and without any off-topic-posts) is now finally coming up in a way of a classic posting series of a more or less regulary up coming row of posts dealing with things and aspects of a specific general theme or topic, comparable to how and what the more or less so far nowadays defunct ''American Oi! History Series'' posting series once was up here (at least now all the old/-er and frequent/regular readers should know the deal and should know by now what I mean). I do this because the announced and also planned posting series simply grew on and on and from work intense periods to periods of nothing that I did for them the working intensity used to differ very much, hm, and so I decided to cut it off and to change it, because even the whole posting series still wouldn't be completly done I already have a lot of posts finished (and this mostly already for a while) and after I still couldn't see any light of releasing and posting the already ready posts one soon day on the horizon simply because the posting series still would take a lot of time before it would be ready and so I quickly and clearly decided for me to bring the already ready posts finally up here one after another, for I really want them badly up here finally, and I also decided to change the focus of this whole series or row of posts. The primarly planned topic of the first ever posting series was more or less in one word: "Bodybuilding"; from its beginnings up to the present days. You can be sure that I sticked with it but also I changed the general theme or topic from Bodybuilding from the then to the now to what I personally see as the golden days of Bodybuilding, from its early beginnings to the switch from the 1980's to the 1990's with the almighty Lee Haney as the final champ of the old glory days of the Iron Age. I will also again post tribute posts to later and current Bodybuilders, for sure, for as I also have and still have much respect for the hard work, passion, and dedication of the champs of today, but with this loose series of posts I will especially concentrate on what I personally see as the golden days, the hey-days of Bodybuilding, the IRON AGE, from its early beginnings around the turn from the 19th to the 20th century to the early 1990's, and especially from the 1930'/1940's to the days of the retirement of the awesome and also already mentioned 8th "Mr. Olympia" Lee Haney a.k.a. "TotaLEE Awesome". It is very simple and I will also spare me every word about the "Why?" and so I just say that this decades for me personally defined what Bodybuilding really is, how great and shining it once was, what it was and is and always should be all about, this decades simply had been and still are the definition of Bodybuilding in all its honour, beauty, pride, passion, and honest hard working mentality and never-back-down attitude. That's it, and so here and now finally comes my tribute to the golden days of Bodybuilding (when it was Bodybuilding and not more and more by performance enhancing drugs and medics and diuretics dominated Massbuilding...), my tribute to the IRON AGE and its heroes and larger than life iconic titans, its champs and masters of the iron. All hail to them and the IRON AGE, and so now finally here we go.

GENERAL WORDS: The IRON AGE posting series with its loose row of posts being released is meant as a posting series respectively a series of posts dedicated to the single thematic topical issue of let us call it Old School Bodybuilding in all its glory. And the IRON AGE posting series will definitely be a big, a very big posting series about this passion and way of life of mine going on for quite a wide range of time with more or less regular and frequent posts, so much I can already say, and I also can already and again say that this is al and will be all about paying tribute to my idols of the world of pumping iron. Maybe I get it done right in time before the this year's "MISTER OLYMPIA" takes place to do something special concerning this very posting series and also going beyond it dealing with the "Mr. Olympia" and its victors and the development of the aesthetics of it, a "Mr. O." special adding up to this new series, we will see, hm, even anyhow it would be perfect, but we will see how much time I can really spend on blogging the next days and weeks and months, so, nope, no promises here and now when and if this all will be finally up and we better and rather finally start to roll on so with this post hailing the IRON AGE. So here we go, let the IRON AGE posting series start and the good times roll!!!

THE SUBJECT*:
(*of this very "IRON AGE" post, the very first one, of course)

IRON AGE Vol. I on "MANSLAUGHTER THUG LIFE"
-
"BODYBUILDING OF THE IRON AGE DAYS: A WAY OF LIFE - HISTORY, PHILOSOPHY, APPROACHES, LEGENDS, ICONS, ATTITUDE"
-
"Maybe STRONG is what you have left when you've used up all your WEAK..."

THE STARTING POINT: Time to start things up here with this very post here and now, the first post of the IRON AGE posting series up here on your dear "MANSLAUGHTER THUG LIFE" blog. Like already said and like you can read in the headline right and direct above this post and this means this whole IRON AGE posting series is totally dedicated to the Old School way of the Sport and Lifestyle of and known as Bodybuilding and in contrast to the known singular posts paying tribute to single (Pro) Bodybuilders this posting series is or will be didacted to Bodybuilding as a sport and even more to Bodybuilding as a Way of Life in its Old School way of the old glory days of the IRON AGE, and so to nothing less than Old School Bodybuilding in its whole majesty. And so to all the readers not and even not a little single bit interested in Sports in general and in Bodybuilding in particular won't find that much for them this time up here and will have to wait for future posts to come up here. Sorry folks, but that's how it is. Hm, but maybe you can also try and test this posting series out, maybe you will be surprised and find something for you and maybe it will even open your mind at least a little bit, who knows, so we will see as time will tell. You won't just find some tribute posts dedicated to single (Pro) Bodybuilders, nah, but you will find hell a lot more within this from now on more and more groing IRON AGE posting series. From the history of Bodybuilding, over old school Bodybuilding to the hey days of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Mike Mentzer, Frank Zane, Tom Platz, Rich Gaspari, Lee Labrada, and (of course) Lee Haney you will find a lot, backed up by introductions into the training and philosophy and different approaches behind it all, as well as maybe some or some more words to and thoughts about diet, nutrition, supplements, and- of course as well- steroids and other poisonous stuff (face it, just the facts, no witch-hunting or down-talking) will find their place in this posting series going on up here, and it all will be enriched by tributes to Bodybuilding legends and icons from yesterday and today like you know them up here already very well. So before we go ahead and jump right into the first post dealing with the "History of Bodybuilding", I will give you a short running order (not complete, so that you can and will maybe still be suprised what's all coming at and for you) of what will be part of this very IRON AGE posting series, and then things will finally really start. Ah, and before I forget and with starting this all let me say that this IRON AGE dedicated and named posting series won't be by any means complete and it will surely be subjective, simply due to the fact that this whole thing called "Bodybuilding" is simply just way too big to give you a complete overview and also simply due to the fact that it is just and solely done by me, a fan of Bodybuilding and a guy who does it by itself since quite some time now, and this is no scientifical work and also no official complete journalistic work, no, it's just the enthusiastic work of and by a fan and sportsman, of and by me, nothing more, nothing less, nothing else.

THE (VERY LOOSE) RUNNING ORDER:
(I.) "Historical roots: The History of Body-building"
(II.) "Old School Body-building and the Bodybuilding from the 1950's on to the 1970's"
(III.) "The Making of Modern Bodybuilding"
(IV.) "The Philosophy of the Volume-Training approach"
(V.) "The Philosophy and System of "HIT" and "BLOOD & GUTS" training"
(VI.) "Diet, Nutrition, Supplements, Steroids, and Workout Approaches"
(VII.) "The IFBB, the Weider Brothers, and Arnold "THE OAK" Schwarzenegger"
(Plus: A big bunch of tribute posts to legendary Bodybuilders from yesterday and today, with a clear focus on legends and icons especially of the past who really left their mark on Bodybuilding, so stay tuned for it which means for much more to come.)

And now here we go, some historical background knowledge about Bodybuilding. That's right, here we go:

IRON AGE - Vol I / Part/Post I:

"THE HISTORY OF BODYBUILDING"

IT ALL BEGAN...: Where to start... Okay, right here, and right now: Bodybuilding and its very history is much longer than most out there might pretty sure think of when they first think about this question. Because it wasn't Arnold Schwarzenegger (even he was without a doubt the greatest of all and of all times, period) and it hadn't been in the 1970's when Bodybuilding first stepped into the life of mankind. No, this happened way before... far way before... First signs that something like Bodybuilding was born and raised and stepped into the life of mankind had been found in Egypt when ancient cave-paintings were discovered and analysed, so that today it's been pretty surely proofed that already 5.000 years before our time people had been doing Bodybuilding mostly because of aesthetical motivations and for aesthetical reasons. Nobody can surely say how and with what the men back then 5.000 years ago before our time used to train and to work-out, but it can be seen as proof(ed) that the men back then anyhow already knew very well how to train their bodies and specific body parts. Also it's easy to say that the men back then were very smart and full of ideas how to get big things done, just think of the egyptian pyramides as a proof of the brilliancy of the people back then. This brilliancy surely benefitted also the ancient approach of Bodybuilding in Egypt back then. Bodybuilding back then was pretty sure sort of a symbol of the social status and especially something that back then was first and foremost done by men, to show their social status on life via their bodies, after other status symbols like big cars and such stuff simply didn't exist back then, so that especially a shredded and muscled body was a very good way to proof and show and demonstrate the social status of the owner of this specific body. It's pretty clear that especially the egyptian men did Bodybuilding and especially of the upper classes, after the lower classes and not to talk about the slaves had been pretty sure already down and out because of the bonecracking hard work they had to do for their livings and after they surely simply won't have got the time and the income/fiscal ressources to do something like this. And that especially the men did it back then is something that needs no further explanation, at least I think so - and if it anyhow should do just think about the social status of the general woman and women in most of the ancient patriarich societies, right...

BODYBUILDING IN THE ANCIENT GREECE AND THE EUROPEAN MIDDLE AGES: After the first findings of traces of Bodybuilding 5.000 years ago in the ancient Egypt the next very well documented findings are traces of Bodybuilding in the ancient Greece 4.000 years ago. And this time we speak of really well documented traces, not mostly this sort of vague conjecturals like the traces of old Bodybuilding in the ancient Egypt mostly caused and provoked. Here we speak of real clues and proofed indications. In the ancient Greece the athletic shaping and draft of the human body reached its first and also legendary altitude. The old Grecians of the ancient Greece really collected and developed a wide and broad wisdom of the human body and its athletic shaping and transformation, and you can easily think of that they also knew very well how the muscles of the human body work together and come together into play, and so they worked out and invented and developed first real training and work out systems to shape the human body and transform it step by step. Even, especially collated to todays training and work out systems, the work outs back then had surely been by far more instinctive and also dominated by emotion and sense than the detailed work out and training systems and approaches of today, but anyhow effective systems and approaches of Body Transformation through workin' out building your body. Looking of how far developed the state and system of the ancient Greece and the old Greeks already had been and what great civilization they used to create and what massive impact this used to have, then I think no one of us today should wonder about it, and also no one should wonder about the importance of a aesthetic body for the old Greeks and their self- and world-view after this is very well known and documented, and after a lot of monuments proof this even also today again and again.

And so no one should wonder that back then a old ancient form of Bodybuilding on a high and advanced level was already existing in ancient times. Back then the athletes normally used to train and become trained in what was known to be the ''Gymnasia'' (in german ''Gymnasien'', in english ''Gymnasium''), which had been the training camps for athletes back then. In such training camps the athletes usually were teenagers and they trained as well as philosophical, scientifical, etc. pp. knowledge and wisdom and education were arbitrated to them, because the old Greeks believed in the perfection of the mind AND the body to make it possible for men to become as great and as complete as only anyhow possible. Maybe you can say that they lived up to the fullfillment and realiziation of the old saying of the heathy mind in a healthy body. The athletes were treated in a great way, and a lot of care was taken of their bodies. For their Bodybuilding work outs and trainings they used back then already weights and trainingsupports comparable to what we use today, minus the modern todays training and work out machines. Should be clear, but just for the completion of this here and now. The value of the human body was back then far much higher than today, when back then it was mostly clear that the body is an temple and should be treated like one, than today it's more like the body is a waste disposable site or a landfill site and that's how most people today treat their bodies with fast food (and best in big loads and in a regular if not daily base), (heavy amounts of) alcohol, drugs and medics (taking them without needing them just to feel better or because the medias tell us to do so or a mixture of both...), not to talk about how they treat their minds. And values like discipline, pride, honour, trust as well as belief, wisdom, knowledge and the thirst and hunger for this benefitted this. Old values. Values that are (unfortunately and sadly enough) untrendy and not hip and gone old and out of style these days... Okay, not the place for a criticism on the current society and system, its morals and values (its what...?!?), and so back to the original topic up here and now. Just by looking back at the ''smartness'' and ''cleverness'' as well as the athletic competence and knowldege of the old Greeks we can also be pretty sure that they should have been very inventive and resourceful in forming bodies with great physiques. And also the military of the ancient Greeks found a deep and authentic interest in the training with weights and Bodybuilding work outs of that time, because they used to find it good that more fitter and stronger men also had been more fitter and stronger soldiers for the Grecian soldiery. But, just btw, that's something that should make nobody wonder about. In the later times of the ancient Greece and under the influence of the ever- and ongrowing ancient world power of the ancient Rome a lot of pulic baths had been added to the Grecian ''Gymnasias'' as well. Comparable to the old ancient Egypt due to many reasons of which some we have already mentioned above also in the ancient Greece the human body used to enjoy a by far way higher reputation than today, especially because shaping and forming the body went hand in hand with sharpening and enriching the mind and so the ancient Greeks and their way of building the human body can be taken as a sort of role model for all of us today, and no, I don't mean this in the way of the todays fucked up mess named the ''wellness'' trend, no, I mean it in a by far more passionated and ampled way of pride, honour, discipline, loyalty, and dedication. It's also very clear that back in the times and world of the ancient Greece hell a lot of official and unofficil sport competitions taken place.

About Bodybuilding in the ancient Rome we don't know that much if anything anyhow anyway. We can only surmise that the ancient Rome used to carry on the tradition of the ancient Greece, especially after they also enriched already the world of sports with their culture and tradition of public baths and after the ancient Rome needed even by far more good if not great and also especially physically loadable soldiers. (Especially in its times of expansion, and before the great Rome decided to fill the ranks of their soldier companies more and more with barbaric strangers what lead directly into the demise of the great, great ancient rome, but that's also a different story.) But after we don't know that much for sure we jump to what followed after the ancient world of Europe and this had been the dark times of the european middle ages. And so now we will have a look on what went on back then if we look at the building of the human body. And this will be a pretty short look, for sure, so much I can tell you all already. Especially after the european middle ages had been something very different, something really very, very different in most if not any ways compared to the ancient times and the reichs of the ancient times in and of Europe, especially Greece and Rome. But more now step after step.

First thing(s) first: I simply couldn't find that much reliable sources that deal with the history of what should become Bodybuilding in the times of the european middle ages, but like the system of culture, society, politics, religion, and civilization of this certain period in history had been pretty to very different compared with european and if you want so maybe also persian antiquity also anything about building and transforming and developing the human body had surely been very different. And it should be clear to say that the only way to work out for the masses had been hard physical work and a life and a way of eating rich on and full of austerity and no real hygienics anyhow comparable to anything we know from and are used of today. So this had been surely no good time and place for anything about the building of the human body... and also the people probably pretty sure had other troubles to deal with back then... I'm pretty sure about this. How this had been in case of the (at least so called) noble aristocracy and nobleness I can't say, especially after the big influence of the catholic Roman christian church on the whole life of the people back then and the catholic averted view on the profane world and its focussing on a fairy tale kingdom-come of milk and honey for everyone and especially for those who had to deal with hardships and sorrows here on good old profane mother earth. So it is maybe possible that any work on the amelioration of the human body in a sense of anyhow anything like Bodybuilding was pretty much pretty strong scorned by the religious authorities back then and if you combine this with the giant influence of the church back then it should be pretty sure that they knew to make or turn this scorning into a cold hard social reality. And if you then also think about all the feuds and wars and sicknesses and all that stuff that used to rage through Europe and to kill whole families and generations again and again back then you maybe can be even more sure about the fact, that anything like Bodybuilding had no and found no room, place, time, and not to talk about interest back then. That's also pretty much common sense in all the sources that I have found and used to write down this article, and it seems also very clear and logic to me anyhow and anything else would really make me wonder heavily. But, to say it clearly, that's all also in big portions a sort of persumption and speculation. I mean, on the one hand it's all making a lot of sense, but on the other hand they used to fight and battle and march to war back then in various forms hell of a lot times and this all back then with good healthy doses of raw and sheer physical power, and especially the noble knights in their heavy armors with their also pretty sure anything but not leight weight weapons needed at last to be trained and to be fed right and properly to have some strong muscles collected together to get their bloody jobs done, and good soldiers had been wanted in every war since time begun and good soldiers always needed and still need to be trained, in a physical way as well as in the duties of their work/job, in a tactical way as well as in an intellectual and psychological way, and so I see no reasons why this should had been any different in the middle ages of mother Europe. (Even the armies back then differed a lot from anything else known in human military history, to get also this straight.) But anyhow and anyway, let us now leave this dodgy, shady, and dark period of the european middle ages and with this let us leave all this speculations behind and move on in history to more important and more brighter periods.

INTO MODERN TIMES: Okay, and now with the leaving of the middle ages we will cut some centuries and some more decades down to nothing than just a few words, before we will come to what is the first ever period of what you may can call modern Bodybuilding in the sense how we use this term today. So over the distance of the times from the end of the midle ages to the times of the 19th century a lot and a lot groundbreaking in the existence of mankind happened and I would bet that also in reconstruction and transformation which means in the building of the human body a lot or at least not less used to happen since then (especially when we keep in mind the konwledge, wisdom, and greatness and glory of ancient Greece and Rome had been re-discovered by mankind after the middle ages past by) but anyway I couldn't find any reliable sources to work with for this very article here and now, and so we will cut this large period pretty much down to nothing and leave it more or less with these few words about it, hm, nah, not more or less, no, because definitely we will leave it just with these few words and then that's it and so now we move on into the 19th century and to the founding father of modern Bodybuilding like we know it today. So while- for example- we could maybe talk about some of the heavy sporting young men in Germany that tried to become fitter and stronger filled with a early enlighted patriotic fire to battle against Napoleon and his occupying forces we will cut this and come to the one man who pretty much should finally invent and/or create what we know today as modern Bodybuilding and so now it's time to talk about no one else than the almighty Eugen Sandow, the founding father and icon of modern Bodybuilding and if you want so the creator and the first very early champ of the IRON AGE. (Note: I will now give you just some general short words about Eugen Sandow, because - so much I can say already here and now - a proper tribute post to this Bodybuilding godfather and genius will follow this very one here and now up in the soon future, so keep calm and stay tuned for it.)

Eugen Sandow was born as Friedrich Wilhelm Müller in Königsberg, Ostpreußen at the 2nd of April of the year of 1867, Eugene Sandow should later become his nick name under which he gained fame and glory. He should die in London in 1925 at the age of around 58 years. Eugen Sandow should make weight training, ''pumping iron'', and to train and to sculp your body with lifting and pressing and curling iron weights very famous - (finally) again - and he should bring it on a new level. And his most succesful weapon of choice had been his very own shows to promote muscles and strength and the resculpting of the human body and that very shows were named "Muscle Display". Eugen Sandow worked as a sort of a showman and was so in the perfect position to bring Bodybuilding finally (back) to fame. Eugen Sandow owned a lot of titanic strength, massive mass (especially for back then), and called also tremendous sheer willpower his very own, and his impressive and overwhelming charisma and emanation is something that you can still get aware of if you look at photos and pictures of him from back then. His focus was heavily on increasing his pure body strength on all levels and so his shows named "Muscle Display" had been something you might can call the very early stages of Strongmen championships or better shows. One of his back then most appreciated performances was him lifting a whole grown up horse live on stage. In the month of May of the year of 1894 a film/movie about and with Eugen Sandow was done, titled simply "Sandow", and became a pretty strong success back then. Beside his "Muscle Display" shows he finally organized in 1901 the first real proper Bodybuilding competition named "The Great Competition" at the 14th of September of this very year and twelve men competed to gain victory and triumph and glory up on stage in this competition. This was pretty much what we know today as Bodybuilding, even in its very, very early stages. Like already said or better written Eugen Sandow died at the age of around 58 years in London in the year 1925. This will be all for now about Eugen Sandow, the icon and pioneer of modern Bodybuilding (as well as modern Powerlifting and Strongmen) and the guy the most notable effigy of todays Bodybuilding is named after, the Sandow-trophy that the winner of the annual "Mister Olympia" of the IFBB gains after winning the competition. More about Eugen Sandow will come up later this very day up here.

Beside Eugen Sandow at the end of the 19th century and the early beginning of the 20th century the idea of building the human body and the interest in it really came back to life, oriented at the ancient ideals and ideas of the old ancient Greeks as the glorification of the human body and its beauty, and not as a way to survive, to fight, and to defend yourself in battle and war and a chaotic social environment in general. No, not for ''battle reasons'', but for ''aesthetic reasons''. But, to point that out and to underline it, without a Eugen Sandow and his "Muscle Display" shows and performances this new interest in and facination of Bodybuilding wouldn't had been this strong and impressive. And it surely wouldn't have lasted on for so long, it would have never made and left such a tremedous impact, point and fact. He benefitted from it heavily, for sure, but also his sheer existence and impressive performances really heated up this back then ''new'' Bodybuilding ''trend'' heavily and strongly, so that it was a win-win-situation, but one that would have never been that fertile without a leading charismatic personality like Eugen Sandow. (Something much later generations could experience again with the almighty Arnold Schwarzenegger, but to this in some later post, for sure.) This ''new trend'' lived on and somehow managed it to survive the ages of the two world wars and all the catastrophes this decades brought to mankind. It moved on from old Mother Europe to the shores of the New World and especially in the United States of America Bodybuilding should become bigger and bigger. But also still in the Old World a lot of potential was still there and so over the first four or five decades of the 20th century the back then most important and best known Bodybuilding show and competition was the "Mister Universum"/"Mister Universe" held in London and that very one saw icons and legends like Bill Pearl, Reg Park, Steve Reeves, and Arnold Schwarzenegger being crowned the "Mister Universum"/"Mister Universe" over the years and decades. Beside this in the New World it was especially the "Mister America" competition that was held by the AAU (/"Amateur Athletic Union") that was very well known, important, and reputated, and the AAU own "Mister America" competition was finally in 1940 the first ever real and through and through pure real modern Bodybuilding competition that was ever held. Because before this very one all the Bodybuilding shows and competitions had been pretty much mixed up shows of Bodybuilding with some ''proof of strength'' show enclosures that you may can name as very early or first ever Strongmen competitions as well as weight lifting and elements of what shall become Powerlifting had been part of the first Bodybuilding shows of the modern times. This finally changed in 1940 with the AAU "Mister America" contest back then being exclusively a Bodybuilding show all about flexing muscles.

The starting point of todays Bodybuilding was finally, after all what we know and can say today, in 1965, when the first ever "Mister Olympia" held place. Organized by the IFBB and the founding father of this Bodybuilding federation, Joe Weider, this Bodybuilding competition should become what is today known and reputant to be the by very far most important and biggest Bodybuilding show and competition on earth so far ever. With all the incredible big amount of different and competing Bodybuilding federations worldwide especially back then finally over all the decades since then the IFBB should become the biggest and most important one ever and so today it is the solely ruling force in the world of professional Bodybuilding. Joe Weider, who died some months ago at the 23th of March of 2013 - R.I.P., was born at the 29th of November in 1919 in Montreal, Canada. In 1942 Joe Weider and his brother Ben Weider founded the "International Federation of Bodybuilders" in short the IFBB, and then things more and more started really to roll.

Very early the Weider brothers realized that they wanted to lead the international world of Bodybuilding and that their IFBB organization would be meant to be to act and take this leading role. And this also meant that their "Mister Olympia" competition was meant to be the biggest Bodybuilding championship battle on earth, and that it should take and act this leading role one day as well, too. Beside this the Weider brothers started to build up a business empire of their very own with magazines and nutrtition/supplement developments and merchandise and clothing line collections under the "Weider" brand label. But that's all another story and after the IFBB and the Weiders will get their proper own post later we will now go back to some more general kept words and this especially all settled down in the context of this very one post here, the context of the History of Bodybuilding. Joe and Ben Weider recognized very early that what they found back then in the modern world of professional Bodybuilding wasn't what they wanted and wasn't what they saw in it, in Bodybuilding. And so they started to work and one after another they conquered them all. The first "Mister Olympia" competition was a spectatcular and bigger and better than most if not all Bodybuilding championships back then and the first ever "Mister Olympia" crowned was the almighty and legendary Larry Scott, unrivaled he conquered and became forever a legend and a icon of Bodybuilding. He really developed the standard. This was in 1965. Since then the "Mister Olympia" lost nothing of its importance and reputance. Instead of this it used to grow on and on. In the 1970's also something pretty new happened and finally really entered the light of the stages of the Bodybuilding sport of today, female Bodybuilding. This was kicked off by women like Jane Fonda who kicked off this trend of female Fitness sports and then also female Bodybuilding. But it took some years untill also the "Miss Olympia" was crowned at the "Mister Olympia" championship, and so in the year 1980 with gorgeous and forever immortalized almighty and incredible beautiful Rachel McLish the first ever "Miss Olympia" was crowned. Since then a lot happened and today there are several subdivisions of female pro Bodybuilding existing and so today in several categories "Miss Olympias" are crowned, from Bikini over Fitness and Figure to Physique (the newest category, battled for 2013 the first time ever and with the great gorgeous Dana Linn Bailey being the first ever "Women's Physique Miss Olympia") and the open Body (-building) class. From the 1960's on the world saw many new directions the Bodybuilding sport took, and today we may can still better speak of Massbuilding then Bodybuilding... but that's another story to tell... So I will now end this very post and leave you with the promise that much more is still to come. And what about the rest? Hm... And the rest is history, or so they say. (But keep calm and trust me, large parts of this history I will introduce to you up here in and via this IRON AGE posting series.)

FINISHING WORDS: Okay, that's it for now, I think so far and so much all is said about and to the History of Bodybuilding so far. Today it looks good for the sculpting of the human body, gaining more and more reputance and importance again, even it's all by far more about trendy Fitness and Wellness and not so much about Bodybuilding in particular. But that's anyhow anyway better than nothing. But, to be honest, in a stressful and hectic world in which the use and abuse of alcohol, cigarettes, other drugs, fast food, industrialized and in every sense and by any means cheap nutrition became a lifestyle, a way of life for thousands and millions of humans it should be clear to anyone that this all Fitness and Wellness and slightyl here and there real Bodybuilding hype today is more of a trend and no matter for how many, it's still a sort of a trend for a more or less relative small group of people, but it's better than nothing and also, who knows, like steady water drops cut holes into stone maybe this Fitness and Wellness and only very rarely Bodybuilding drops will cut slowly here and there bigger and bigger holes into this disgusting world of poisoneous cheap living of mindlessness and senselessness, we will see and can just hope the best. If we take a look at the 10.000 visitors at the this years "Mister Olympia", the still booming and ever ongrowing supplement industry, the incredible large and still growing amount of Fitness Studios and also finally again real Bodybuilding Gyms, the more and more over the whole world spreading "Arnold Sports Festival", and also at the bigger and bigger growing "FIBO" expo here in Germany we can say that hope is maybe not lost after all, and this are good news, that Bodybuilding is really becoming more important again for us, for mankind. And about more, much more about and of Bodybuilding you can read from now on finally again more often and more frequent (maybe even more regular) up here.


So far I just thank you for your interest and thanks for reading this article, I hope you enjoyed it, and yes, I know, it's anything than complete but that's something that I already told you above and so keep calm and maybe you just enjoy the next following posts like you hopefully enjoyed this very one post here and now. More is coming hopefully soon, the Eugene Sandow pretty sure will be up next. And for a more loose than complete list of topics coming up here for you with and through this IRON AGE posting series just look above to the (loose) running order of this very one here, the IRON AGE posting series. Ah, and be sure that we will also be paying tribute to the great ones of old in large portions. So, that's it all for now, closing time for now and the day up here. And, again, so long thanks for your time and interest. /// Andy