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James Figg
James Figg
from Wikipedia

Mezzotint by John Faber, c. 1727–1729 (after a John Ellys portrait)

James Figg (before 1700[a] – 8 December 1734; also spelt James Fig[5]) was an English prizefighter and instructor in historical European martial arts. While Figg primarily fought with weapons including short swords, quarterstaffs, and cudgels, he also played a role in boxing's development. In 1719, he opened a London fighting venue that could seat more than 1,000 spectators and was one of the first of its kind. In 1725, he organised and promoted modern history's first international boxing match at his amphitheatre. He claimed to have won more than 200 matches during his career, and was posthumously considered the first boxing champion.

Little is known about Figg's early life, except that he came to London from Thame, Oxfordshire. In London, Figg gained a reputation as a skilled fighter and set up a business training students in combat with weapons and fists. He promoted fights with both male and female combatants at his venue as well as bouts of animal blood sport. He also set up outdoor boxing booths and rings in fields, parks, and fairs around London. By the end of his career in the early 1730s, Figg had fought in front of European royalty, including George, Prince of Wales, and the future Holy Roman Emperor Francis I, as well as aristocrats, politicians, writers, artists, and actors, and was one of the better-known personages in London. Among depictions of Figg in art and literature, art historians most discuss him for his friendship with William Hogarth and his appearance in several of the artist's paintings and engravings.

Early life

[edit]

James Figg was born in Thame, Oxfordshire,[6][3] sometime before 1700, though various sources dispute the exact year.[a] He was also possibly born in Priestend, to Francis and Elizabeth Figg, as one of their seven children.[2] Little is certain about his early life before 1714,[1] by which time he was a student of the defence instructor Timothy Buck of Clare Market.[1]

Fighting career

[edit]

In 1719, Figg opened an amphitheatre and fighting school in London adjoining the City of Oxford tavern in Oxford Road, Marylebone, where he taught bare-knuckle boxing, fencing, quarterstaff, and cudgel combat.[7] While boxing had existed for decades, and a fenced enclosure existed in Hyde Park for practitioners of historical European martial arts, Figg may have been one of the first people to turn combat sport into a business.[8] His venture was one of the earliest and most noted indoor fighting venues of its time.[7] His students included early professional prizefighters such as William Flanders, William Gill, and Thomas Sibblis, as well as men of the gentry and nobility.[1] Figg was also a fight promoter and hosted matches fought by both male and female combatants such as Thomas Allen, John Gretton, Bob Whitaker, and Elizabeth Wilkinson,[1] as well as bouts of animal blood sport, including bear-baiting and tiger-baiting.[9]

Though Figg posthumously gained a reputation as a boxing pioneer, he primarily fought with weapons such as short swords, quarterstaffs, and cudgels.[1][10][11] The only known occasions on which Figg fought public boxing matches were at the Southwark Fair[1] where he would fight fair-goers,[12] though he also set up fighting booths and rings in fields and parks including Smithfield, Moorfields, St George's Fields, and Hyde Park.[13] However, Figg organised and promoted the first international boxing match in modern history. On 20 January 1725, Figg arranged a match between Venetian gondolier Alberto di Carni and English drover Bob Whitaker.[14][1] George, Prince of Wales, watched the fight from a specially constructed royal box.[15]

Figg fought semi-regular matches with recurring opponents, a common practice among prizefighters at the time. For example, he fought a man named Rowland Bennet on at least 23 occasions over the course of his career, and in 1730, Figg reportedly fought another man three times in two months. He also fought matches in which he and another weapons master would face off against another pair of fighters.[1]

Figg's greatest rival may have been Edward "Ned" Sutton, a tobacco pipe maker of Gravesend,[1] against whom he fought a series of heavily publicised matches,[16] including one in which Figg suffered his only recorded defeat, having taken a wound in the belly and being "cloven in the foot".[17] In 1725, the poet John Byrom visited Figg's amphitheatre where he saw Figg fight Sutton. He reported: "Figg had a wound and bled pretty much; Sutton had a blow with a quarterstaff just upon his knee, which made him lame, so then they gave over".[18][19] On 6 June 1727, Figg defeated Sutton at the former's amphitheatre before an audience of approximately 1,000 spectators, including Prime Minister Robert Walpole, Poet Laureate Colley Cibber, and satirist Jonathan Swift.[8]

In October 1730, the Ipswich Journal reported: "the invincible Mr. James Figg fought at his Amphitheatre Mr. Holmes, an Irishman, who keeps an Inn at Yaul near Waterford in Ireland, and came into England on purpose to fight this English Champion". It was reported that during the bout, Holmes had his wrist cut to the bone and was therefore forced to retire. It was stated that this fight was the 271st contest Figg fought without defeat.[20][21]

Later life and death

[edit]

After 1730, Figg largely gave up serious fighting, though he fought exhibition matches with Jack Broughton.[15] In December 1731, he also won a sword fight against John Sparks at the Little Theatre in Haymarket, which was attended by foreign dignitaries including the Duke of Lorraine and Count Kinsky.[22][23][non-primary source needed]

In June 1731, Figg began teaching at new premises in Poland Street, and his student Thomas Sibblis took over the Oxford Road amphitheatre.[1]

Figg died on 8 December 1734 and was buried in the churchyard of St Marylebone on 12 December.[24] Little is known of his family except that his wife gave birth to a son the day after Figg's funeral.[1] His former student George Taylor took over Figg's business after his death.[15][25]

Legacy

[edit]

By the end of his career, Figg was a recognisable and famous person in London.[3] Royalty, aristocrats, politicians, writers, artists, and actors attended his fights,[8] and in autumn 1729, Figg was made gate-keeper to upper St James's Park by the Earl of Essex.[26][1] He appeared in the writings of John Byrom,[19] Henry Fielding,[27] and Alexander Pope,[28] and his portrait was sketched and painted by artists John Ellys[16] and Jonathan Richardson.[1]

Artist William Hogarth was also a friend and admirer of Figg, who appears in several of the former's paintings, including Southwark Fair, in which he brandishes a sword on horseback,[29] and in The Levée, the second entry in the series A Rake's Progress, in which he stands among the rake's tutors, holding quarterstaffs.[30][3] Figg may also feature in A Midnight Modern Conversation,[16] though Hogarth captioned the picture: "Think not to find one meant resemblance there, we lash the Vices but the Persons spare".[31] Hogarth's painting The Pugilist was long attributed as a portrait of Jack Broughton, but Hogarth scholar Elizabeth Einberg and boxing historian Tony Gee have both claimed that it is probably of Figg.[32][33]

Figg was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1992[34] and the Bare Knuckle Boxing Hall of Fame in 2010.[35] A blue plaque dedicated to him was unveiled at The James Figg Pub (formerly The Greyhound Inn), Cornmarket, Thame, on 14 April 2011.[2]

In art

[edit]

Notes and references

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
James Figg (c. 1684 – 8 December 1734) was an English bare-knuckle prizefighter widely recognized as the first champion of in the , a title he claimed in 1719 after defeating numerous opponents in brutal, unregulated bouts that helped establish as a popular spectacle in early 18th-century Britain. Born into a poor farming family in , , as the youngest of seven children, Figg displayed early prowess in , performing at fairs and excelling in wrestling, , cudgel fighting, and quarterstaff combat before turning professional around 1711. By 1719, with patronage from the Earl of Peterborough, Figg opened the Academy of Arms and Art of Self-Defence on in , where he trained and aspiring fighters in the "noble science of defence," transforming prizefighting from street brawls into a structured pursuit that attracted royalty, including the Prince of Wales. He reportedly fought in over 270 contests, suffering only one loss—to rival Ned Sutton in 1725 while ill—before reclaiming victory in a 1727 rematch and retiring undefeated as champion around 1730, after which he promoted events at his own Figg's Amphitheatre on Oxford Road. Standing six feet tall and known for his multi-talented athleticism, Figg's career popularized exhibitions and bare-knuckle rules that influenced successors like , earning him the enduring moniker "Father of ." He died in at age 50 and was buried in St. Marylebone Parish Churchyard, leaving behind a wife and children.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

James Figg was born in , , , with the exact year of his birth subject to dispute among historical sources; estimates range from 1684 to before 1700, though local records commonly reference February 1684. He was the youngest of seven children in a modest farming family headed by his parents, Francis Figg and Elizabeth Figg. The Figg family resided in a row of cottages, likely in the Priestend area of , an agricultural town where poverty was common among rural households during the late . Francis and Elizabeth's occupation as farmers exposed their children to demanding physical labor from an early age, contributing to the development of resilience in a pre-industrial economy reliant on manual agrarian work. 's socioeconomic context at the time featured small-scale farming communities with limited opportunities for formal , as resources were prioritized for sustenance and local trade rather than schooling. Little is documented about specific family dynamics or the identities of Figg's siblings, but the household's rural setting provided early familiarity with communal events such as local fairs, where physical contests were a regular feature. This environment of hardship and laid the groundwork for Figg's later interests in sports during his adolescence.

Initial Training and Influences

James Figg arrived in by 1714, where he commenced his formal training as a under the renowned Master Timothy Buck of Clare Market, a celebrated instructor in the noble science of defence. This immersed Figg in the foundational disciplines of early 18th-century sports, emphasizing practical mastery over theoretical study. Under Buck's guidance, Figg honed skills in , including with the small-sword and back-sword, cudgeling with quarterstaffs, and wrestling techniques that integrated and throws. These varied forms cultivated his adaptable fighting style, blending precision strikes from , blunt-force impacts from cudgeling, and close-quarters control from wrestling, all essential to the era's traditions. His rural upbringing in , , provided an initial base of physical robustness through laborious farm work, preparing him for the rigors of urban training. Figg's development extended beyond structured apprenticeship to the vibrant fairground scene, where he gained exposure through public exhibitions and informal bouts against assorted challengers. These performances, often held at venues like Southwark Fair, allowed him to refine exhibitionary techniques under the gaze of crowds, blending combat with spectacle. Early influences from gladiators further shaped his approach, drawing on their theatrical reenactments of ancient combats to promote the "noble art of " as both and in early 18th-century .

Prizefighting Career

Early Matches and Rise to Prominence

James Figg's professional prizefighting career emerged in the 1710s, with initial bouts primarily at local fairs and venues such as Southwark Fair, where he exhibited his skills in bare-knuckle boxing, wrestling, and cudgel fighting against multiple challengers in a booth on the bowling green. These early matches, often undefeated, marked his transition from trainee to professional, including a notable victory in a cudgel fight against an unnamed opponent that highlighted his mastery of the weapon and helped establish his reputation. His foundational training under Timothy Buckhorse enabled this early success by honing techniques in backsword and quarterstaff that integrated seamlessly into his prizefights. By 1719, Figg had opened his amphitheatre near the City of Oxford tavern in , , where he hosted and participated in bouts that solidified his dominance, leading to his recognition as England's first bare-knuckle champion. These performances, including wrestling-integrated fights at the venue and before aristocratic audiences, built his fame through undefeated starts in bare-knuckle and wrestling matches, though specific early records remain sparse. Historical accounts claim Figg amassed over 200 bouts by the end of his career, with many early ones at fairs and local inns like the Greyhound in , . In the era's bare-knuckle contests, fights lacked gloves and formal rules, featuring no-holds-barred wrestling elements such as throws, holds, and strikes to downed opponents, often continuing until one fighter could no longer proceed. This hybrid style, emphasizing endurance and versatility, defined Figg's rise in the 1710s and early , as he defeated challengers like Mr. Donald in a bout on 11 September 1723 at Marybone by severing his arm with a weapon.

Major Fights and Undefeated Streak

James Figg's major prizefights during the late and early exemplified his prowess in and related combat disciplines, contributing to his reputation as an undefeated champion in the ring. His only recorded defeat came against Edward "Ned" Sutton on 14 April 1725, a loss that Figg avenged decisively in subsequent encounters. On 6 June 1727, Figg faced Sutton in a high-profile rematch at the venue near , structured as a three-round contest involving broadsword, bare fists, and cudgels. Figg emerged victorious, breaking Sutton's knee with a cudgel in the final round and forcing his opponent to concede with the words, "Enough indeed. You are a brave fellow and my master." This triumph solidified Figg's dominance in bare-knuckle fighting, reclaiming any perceived vulnerability from their earlier bout and establishing him as the preeminent pugilist of the era. In 1725, Figg organized and promoted what is recognized as the first international match in modern history, held on 20 at his amphitheatre on . The bout pitted English drover Bob Whitaker, whom Figg had trained, against the Venetian gondolier Alberto di Carni (also known as Tito Alberto di Carini). Whitaker secured a swift victory with a decisive body punch, highlighting Figg's role in elevating to an international spectacle and drawing elite crowds. This event served as a stepping stone from Figg's earlier regional matches to his high-profile championship bouts. Figg's undefeated boxing streak reached its zenith in a series of brutal encounters with the Irish fighter William Holmes in 1730. The third and most notable of these, on 14 October at Figg's amphitheatre, was billed as Figg's 271st trial of skill and drew large crowds, including nobility. In the second bout of the match, Figg inflicted a severe wound to Holmes's left wrist with his sword, cutting it to the bone and forcing the Irishman to yield without landing a blow in return. Contemporary reports emphasized the ferocity of the contest, underscoring Figg's unyielding record in bare-knuckle and weapons-based fights. By 1729, Figg was widely acknowledged as the inaugural "Champion of England" in , a title he claimed around 1719 and held until his retirement in 1730, based on his undefeated record in over 270 bouts. His status attracted royal patronage, with fights attended by figures such as George, (the future George II), who witnessed demonstrations at the amphitheatre. In autumn 1729, the appointed Figg as gatekeeper of upper , a prestigious role reflecting his elevated standing in aristocratic circles and the growing legitimacy of prizefighting under elite endorsement.

Promotion of the Sport

Establishment of the Academy

In 1719, leveraging his success as a prizefighter, James Figg established Figg's on in , backed by the patronage of the Earl of Peterborough; this venue served as a pioneering hub for instruction known as the English School of Arms and Art of Self-Defense. The formalized in various disciplines, marking a shift from informal to structured education in the noble art of . The curriculum at Figg's Academy encompassed , , cudgeling with the , and wrestling, drawing pupils from diverse social strata including the sons of who sought practical skills in personal defense and gentlemanly sports. Figg and his instructors emphasized techniques that blended physical prowess with tactical acumen, attracting apprentices eager to master these arts under the guidance of England's premier champion. This inclusive approach helped democratize access to martial training, fostering a broader interest in pugilism across classes. Figg's business model relied on fee-based private lessons, which provided a steady revenue stream independent of his prizefighting earnings, supplemented by staging challenge matches within the venue to draw paying crowds. Architecturally, the featured a central stage for demonstrations and bouts, surrounded by benches accommodating over 1,000 spectators, enabling efficient hosting of instructional sessions and public exhibitions that standardized training methods. By 1721, Figg relocated the academy to Oxford Road near the City of Oxford tavern, expanding its influence while maintaining its role as a for professionalizing boxing instruction.

Public Demonstrations and Events

Figg hosted numerous challenge bouts and mock fights at his in London's Oxford Road, drawing paying audiences of fashionable gentlemen and who attended frequent advertised performances to witness displays of pugilistic skill. These events often featured structured exhibitions rather than full prizefights, including trials against opponents like Rowland Bennet in 23 encounters before April 1731 and three battles with William Holmes in 1730, the last on 14 October marking his 271st trial. A milestone among these was the 1725 international match on 20 January, where Figg organized and trained English fighter John Whitacre to defeat a Venetian gondolier before a paying crowd, marking one of the earliest recorded cross-national contests. Several performances blended entertainment with skill displays for elite audiences, including a 1733 bout at the where Figg's student Bob Whitaker defeated Italian Tito Alberto di Carini, attended by King George II. Earlier exhibitions occurred before , such as a 3 December 1731 fight against John Sparks at the Little Theatre in Haymarket, performed for the Duke of Lorraine and Count Kinski. These royal and aristocratic viewings elevated 's status as refined spectacle, with audiences often numbering around 1,000, including high-ranking officials. Figg introduced structured rules for these exhibitions, emphasizing controlled rounds and fouls to distinguish them from chaotic brawls, though without formal codification; this approach influenced early by promoting safer, more predictable contests that appealed to spectators. His amphitheatre's , including a dedicated stage and railings, enabled this shift from impromptu street fights to organized events, fostering pugilism's growth as a commercial with broad social appeal among the . Attendance records highlight the events' impact, as regular gatherings of helped legitimize beyond working-class origins, drawing crowds that supported its transition into a structured form.

Later Life and Death

Final Years and Retirement

Following his final prizefight against William Holmes in 1730, James Figg retired from competitive , leveraging his near-undefeated record to transition gracefully into a role focused on instruction and promotion. He shifted his energies to the full-time management of his academy, located near Oxford Road, where he continued to train pupils in pugilism, , , , and cudgelling until at least 1733. Figg's academy remained a hub for aspiring fighters and gentlemen, with him personally overseeing sessions and hosting occasional exhibition bouts to demonstrate techniques. Among his documented pupils during this period was Jack Broughton, a promising fighter whom Figg mentored in the art of ; Broughton would later succeed him as a prominent figure in the sport. Other notable trainees included Bob Whitaker and George Taylor, who helped sustain the academy's reputation and draw crowds for instructional events. In his personal life, Figg enjoyed financial stability derived from the academy's fees and aristocratic patronage, which supported his household without the risks of active prizefighting. He was married and had children, including a posthumous son born the night after his death. By the early 1730s, they resided together in a home on Oxford Road. This period marked a settled domestic existence for Figg, bolstered by his status as a respected instructor.

Illness and Passing

In late 1734, James Figg suffered a severe decline in health attributed to the cumulative physical toll of his extensive prizefighting career, succumbing to a condition reported as "a ." He died on the night of 8 December 1734 at his residence in Oxford Road, , aged about 50 (born c. 1684). Figg was buried on 12 December in the burial ground of . Upon his passing, his academy of arms transitioned to his former pupil George Taylor, who assumed management and continued staging public demonstrations of and . Contemporary accounts in newspapers such as the Daily Journal (9 December 1734) and Grub-Street Journal (12 December 1734) mourned Figg as an undefeated champion and pioneer of the "noble science of defence," emphasizing his unmatched prowess and instructional legacy.

Legacy

Influence on Boxing Development

James Figg is widely recognized as the "Father of Boxing" for his pioneering integration of wrestling and fencing techniques into bare-knuckle prizefighting, which elevated the sport from chaotic brawls to a more structured martial discipline. Standing at six feet tall and excelling in multiple combat forms, Figg incorporated fencing's footwork, parries, and ripostes alongside wrestling's grappling holds to create a comprehensive self-defense system taught at his academy. This holistic approach influenced key successors, notably Jack Broughton, who trained under Figg and later formalized boxing rules in 1743, drawing directly from these integrated methods to emphasize scientific punching over mere brute force. Through his academy's public exhibitions at the on Oxford Road, Figg contributed to the early of boxing rules by promoting and structured contests, serving as testing grounds for innovations that professionalized the sport. These events featured elevated square platforms with wooden rails—precursors to the modern ring—encouraging controlled, spectator-friendly bouts rather than unstructured ground fights common at fairs. By hosting matches that attracted and , including training sessions for aristocrats, Figg transformed prizefighting from rowdy fairground spectacles into refined entertainment patronized by the elite, laying the foundation for its acceptance as a legitimate pursuit. Figg's legacy as the inaugural heavyweight , a title he claimed in and held until his retirement, was solidified posthumously in 1734 upon his death, establishing the precedent for formalized world titles in . His record in over 200 bouts, with only one loss to Ned Sutton in 1725 (avenged in a 1727 rematch), and succession by protégé George Taylor underscored this recognition, ensuring the championship lineage continued and influenced the sport's governance for generations.

Depictions in Art and Culture

James Figg's prominence as a prizefighter and instructor made him a frequent subject in 18th-century visual art, where he was portrayed as a symbol of robust physicality and national vigor. In William Hogarth's engraving Southwark Fair (1734), Figg appears prominently on the right side, mounted on a horse and brandishing a , ready for combat amid the chaotic festivities of the fair, capturing the rowdy entertainment culture of Georgian . This depiction underscores Figg's role in popular spectacles, blending his athletic prowess with the satirical edge Hogarth often employed to critique social excesses. Additionally, Hogarth created trade cards for Figg around 1725, advertising his academy and emphasizing his expertise in and staff fighting, which circulated widely to promote his events. Engravings and promotional materials from Figg's era further immortalized his undefeated status and drew crowds to his bouts. A mezzotint portrait by John Faber the younger, produced between 1727 and 1729, shows Figg in a heroic pose, staff in hand, reinforcing his as England's champion of the "noble science of defence." Broadsides and newspaper advertisements, such as those in the Daily Post and London Journal during the 1710s and 1720s, billed Figg as the invincible master of , wrestling, and weapons combat, often exaggerating his victories to heighten public interest and ticket sales. These , printed on cheap paper for broad distribution, highlight how Figg's fame was actively cultivated through visual and textual hype in the burgeoning of the time. In literature, Figg received contemporary nods that linked him to the era's fascination with rough sports and roguish heroes. Poet John Byrom referenced Figg in his 1725 journal and verse, praising his feats in cudgeling and swordplay as emblematic of English resilience. Early biographies, including Pierce Egan's Boxiana (1812) and James Caulfield's Portraits, Memoirs, and Characters of Remarkable Persons (1819), romanticized Figg's life, portraying him as a self-made icon who elevated prizefighting from street brawls to organized entertainment. Daniel Defoe's writings on underworld activities, such as his accounts of fairs and illicit sports, indirectly contextualize Figg's world, though without direct mention, reflecting the broader cultural allure of figures like him in narratives of urban vitality. Figg's representations in Georgian-era art and media positioned him as an of British , embodying strength, discipline, and patriotic spirit amid the era's shifting ideals of manhood. In works like Hogarth's, he stands as a to effete , promoting a plebeian ideal of physical heroism that influenced later depictions of national character in visual and . This symbolic legacy persisted, with Figg's image evoking the raw, unrefined vigor associated with England's sporting traditions, distinct from classical models of beauty favored in elite portraiture.

Modern Recognition

James Figg's contributions to the sport of have been formally recognized in the 20th and 21st centuries through inductions into prestigious halls of fame. In 1954, he was inducted into Ring magazine's Boxing Hall of Fame. In 1992, he was inducted into the as a pioneer, honoring his role in establishing as a competitive discipline and his status as the first acknowledged heavyweight champion. This recognition underscores his foundational influence on the sport's development, which continues to be celebrated today. Similarly, in 2010, Figg was enshrined in the Bare Knuckle Boxing Hall of Fame as part of its inaugural class of historical inductees, acknowledging his prowess as an early bare-knuckle champion and promoter. A tangible tribute to Figg's origins was unveiled on 14 April 2011 with the erection of a at The James Figg Pub (formerly The Greyhound Inn) in Cornmarket, , . Installed by the Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board, the plaque commemorates Figg's birth in around 1684 and his early association with the inn, where he honed his skills in , wrestling, swordplay, and cudgel fighting before becoming England's champion. Contemporary scholarship highlights significant gaps in the historical record of Figg's life and career, reflecting the challenges of documenting 18th-century prizefighting. His birth year is uncertain, placed before 1700 in , , with little known about his parents or early years beyond his arrival in by 1714. Fight records are incomplete, relying on sporadic newspaper accounts and journals that document only about 271 trials by 1730, including repeated bouts against opponents like Rowland Bennet, while many others remain unverified due to the informal nature of the era's combats. These historiographical issues emphasize the legendary aspects of Figg's undefeated streak and promotional efforts, as scholars continue to piece together his legacy from fragmented primary sources.

References

  1. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Athletics_and_Manly_Sport/Ethics_and_Evolution_of_Boxing
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