Introduction
                             
Professional  bouts are usually much longer than amateur bouts, typically ranging from  ten to twelve rounds, though four round fights are common for less  experienced fighters or club fighters. There are also some two-[15] and  three-round professional bouts,[16] especially in Australia. Through the  early twentieth century, it was common for fights to have unlimited  rounds, ending only when one fighter quit, benefiting high-energy  fighters like Jack Dempsey. Fifteen rounds remained the internationally  recognized limit for championship fights for most of the twentieth  century until the early 1980s, when the death of boxer Duk Koo Kim  reduced the limit to twelve.  Headgear is not permitted in professional bouts, and boxers are  generally allowed to take much more punishment before a fight is halted.  At any time, however, the referee may stop the contest if he believes  that one participant cannot defend himself due to injury. In that case,  the other participant is awarded a technical knockout win. A technical  knockout would also be awarded if a fighter lands a punch that opens a  cut on the opponent, and the opponent is later deemed not fit to  continue by a doctor because of the cut. For this reason, fighters often  employ cutmen, whose job is to treat cuts between rounds so that the  boxer is able to continue despite the cut. If a boxer simply quits  fighting, or if his corner stops the fight, then the winning boxer is  also awarded a technical knockout victory. In contrast with amateur  boxing, professional male boxers have to be bare chested.
                                         History
                        
Fist fighting depicted in Sumerian relief  carvings from the 3rd millennium BC, while an ancient Egyptian relief  from the 2nd millennium BC depicts both fist-fighters and spectators.[1]  Both depictions show bare-fisted contests.[1] In 1927 Dr. E. A.  Speiser, an archaeologist, discovered a Mesopotamian stone tablet in  Baghdad, Iraq depicting two men getting ready for a prize fight. The  tablet is believed to be 7,000 years old.[2] The earliest evidence for  fist fighting with any kind of gloves can be found on Minoan Crete (c.  1500–900 BC), and on Sardinia, if we consider the boxing statues of  Prama mountains (c. 2000–1000 BC) 
        In ancient Rome, there were two  forms of boxing both coming from Etruscan boxing. The athletic form of  boxing remained popular throughout the Roman world. The other form of  boxing was gladiatorial. Fighters were usually criminals and slaves who  hoped to become champions and gain their freedom; however, free men,  women, and even aristocrats also fought. Gladiators wore lead "cestae"  over their knuckles and heavy leather straps on their forearms to  protect against blows. The deeply scarred and cauliflower eared figure  of the Boxer of Quirinal show what a brutal sport it could be (matches  often ending in the death or maiming of an opponent).  Eventually, fist fighting became so popular that even emperors started  fighting, and the practice was promoted by Caesar Neronis. A fight  between the agile Dares and the towering Entellus is described at length  in the Roman national epic Aeneid (1st century BC).[4] The Roman  philosopher Plotinus (Enneads 3.2.8) indicates that youths trained at  the gymnasium for self-defense.  In 393 A.D., the Olympics were banned by the Christian emperor  Theodosius, and in 500 A.D., boxing was banned altogether by Emperor  Theodoric the Great as boxing being an insult to God because it  disfigures the face, the image of God. However, this edict had little  effect outside the major cities of the Eastern Empire.[5] By this time,  western Europe was no longer part of the Roman Empire. Boxing remained  popular in Europe throughout the Middle Ages and beyond. Wrestling,  fencing and racing (both chariot and foot) were never banned by the late  Romans, as they did not cause disfigurement                                              
                         Records of Classical boxing activity  disappeared after the fall of the WesternRoman Empire  when the wearing  of weapons become common once again and interest in fighting with the  fists waned. However, there are detailed records of various  fist-fighting sports that were maintained in different cities and  provinces of Italy between the 12th and 17th centuries. There was also a  sport in ancient Rus  called Fistfight . As the wearing of swords  became less common, there was renewed interest in fencing with the  fists. The sport would later resurface in England during the early 18th  century in the form of bare-knuckle boxing  sometimes referred to as prizefighting . The first documented account of a bare-knuckle fight in England appeared in 1681 in the London Protestant Mercury ,  and the first English bare-knuckle champion was James Figg  in 1719.   This is also the time when the word "boxing" first came to be used. It  should be noted, that this earliest form of modern boxing was very  different. Contests in Mr. Figg's time, in addition to fistfighting,  also contained fencing and cudgeling. 
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