P.Oxy. III 466
by Carlos MARINHO
P.Oxy. III 466 represents a crucial missing link between athletic training in Classical Antiquity and the technical systematization of combat practices observed in the medieval period. It stands as rare and compelling evidence that structured, pedagogical instruction in grappling long predates the medieval fight books by more than a millennium. The intellectual and technical foundations of European grappling were already firmly established in the Greco-Roman world, well before the emergence of medieval martial traditions.
Classical Foundations – The Oxyrhynchus Papyrus 466
While the majority of surviving Ringen treatises date from the fourteenth century onward, European grappling possesses much deeper historical roots in Pale, the ancient Greek wrestling tradition. The manuscript known as P.Oxy. III 466, dated to the second century CE, is widely regarded as the oldest known martial arts manual of the Western world.
Historical Context and Provenance
Origin: Discovered in an ancient rubbish heap in Oxyrhynchus, Egypt, by Bernard P. Grenfell and Arthur S. Hunt.
Date: Second century CE (Roman Imperial period).
Significance: Demonstrates that technical instruction in unarmed combat was already formalized, systematic, and pedagogical long before the rise of medieval chivalric culture.
Structure and Nature of the Text
The papyrus consists of three fragmented columns. Unlike the lavishly illustrated fight books of the fifteenth century, this manuscript was clearly intended as a practical training guide, emphasizing concise, direct instructions rather than theoretical exposition.
Language: Ancient Greek
Format: Three columns (13, 15, and 10 lines)
Key Command: πλέξον (Plexon)
Translation: “Intertwine,” “Engage fully,” or “Mix oneself into the fight”
Techniques Described
Despite its fragmentary condition, the papyrus outlines actions that would be immediately recognizable to later medieval grappling masters:
Wrist Control: Instructions on seizing the opponent’s wrist to disrupt posture and balance.
Clinch Fighting: Techniques involving the insertion of the arm beneath the opponent’s shoulder—what modern grappling terminology would describe as underhooks.
Throws and Off-Balancing: Directions for destabilizing and projecting the opponent following a block or grip engagement.
These elements demonstrate a continuity of grappling principles across centuries, rooted in biomechanics rather than cultural convention.
The Concept of Plexon (πλέξον)
One of the most distinctive features of P.Oxy. III 466 is its repeated use of the command πλέξον (plexon). Unlike medieval Ringen manuals, which often provide step-by-step descriptions leading to a definitive conclusion, this papyrus frequently ends an instruction with plexon.
This suggests a pedagogical approach in which the manual teaches entry techniques and positional access, while leaving the resolution of the encounter to the practitioner’s embodied skill, situational awareness, and combat instinct. In other words, plexon encapsulates the act of fully engaging—intertwining—with the opponent, trusting that trained reflexes and experience will guide the outcome.
This concept closely aligns with modern grappling philosophies, particularly in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, where entries, transitions, and positional fluency are emphasized over rigid, pre-scripted sequences.
Bibliographic Reference
P.Oxy. III 466. Columbia University, Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
In: Grenfell, B. P.; Hunt, A. S. The Oxyrhynchus Papyri, vol. III.
London: Egypt Exploration Fund, 1903.