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  2. Boxing is a sport involving attack and defense with the fists, usually with the use of padded gloves. A boxer wins a match either by outscoring the opponent or by rendering the opponent incapable of continuing the match. Bouts range from 3 to 12 rounds, each round normally lasting three minutes.

  3. Boxing - Ring Rules, Equipment | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/Ring-rules-and-equipment

    Boxing - Ring Rules, Equipment: Because there is no universally accepted world ruling body for professional boxing, each country has its own set of rules, and in the United States there are different rules in different states.

  4. Boxing - Rules, Techniques, History | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/Professional-boxing

    Boxing - Rules, Techniques, History: The man who made boxing into big business was George (“Tex”) Rickard, the sport’s first great promoter. After staging the world’s lightweight championship bout between Joe Gans and Oscar (“Battling”) Nelson to publicize the mining town of Goldfield, Nevada, in 1906, he realized the potential of ...

  5. Boxing - Legal Status, Rules, Regulations | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/Boxings-legal-status

    Boxing - Legal Status, Rules, Regulations: Rule changes in British boxing took into account not only shifts in societal norms but the inescapable fact that the sport was illegal. The primary task of proponents was to reconcile a putatively barbaric activity with a civilizing impulse.

  6. Boxing - Queensberry Rules, Gloves, Rounds | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/The-Queensberry-rules

    John Graham Chambers of the Amateur Athletic Club devised a new set of rules in 1867 that emphasized boxing technique and skill. Chambers sought the patronage of John Sholto Douglas, the 9th marquess of Queensberry, who lent his name to the new guidelines.

  7. Boxing - Weight Classes, Divisions, Rules | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/Weight-divisions

    There were traditionally eight weight divisions in men’s boxing. More divisions were added, and professional governing bodies now recognize a total of 17 weight classes, which had their current names established by the major boxing organizations in 2015. The upper limits of these.

  8. Marquess of Queensberry rules | Glove size, Rounds & Referees -...

    www.britannica.com/sports/Marquess-of-Queensberry-rules

    Marquess of Queensberry rules, code of rules that most directly influenced modern boxing. Written by John Graham Chambers, a member of the British Amateur Athletic Club, the rules were first published in 1867 under the sponsorship of John Sholto Douglas, ninth marquess of Queensberry, from whom.

  9. Boxing - Women, History, Rules | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/Women-in-boxing

    In amateur boxing, women follow the rules of men’s boxing with a few exceptions—the rounds are shorter, and women wear breast protectors, with groin protection being optional. Professional boxing has been equally difficult for female fighters.

  10. Boxing - Bare Knuckle, Rules, History | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/The-bare-knuckle-era

    One of the greatest bare-knuckle prizefighters in history, Broughton devised the modern sport’s first set of rules in 1743, and those rules, with only minor changes, governed boxing until they were replaced by the more detailed London Prize Ring rules in 1838.

  11. Boxing - International Rules, Techniques, & History | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/sports/boxing/International-boxing

    Boxing - International Rules, Techniques, & History: Professional boxing was once largely a British-American rivalry, although many other nations had their own self-defense or martial arts sports. In the 20th century, however, boxing under the Queensberry rules became truly international.