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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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126 Folklore in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong><br />

system that has been passed down along the Saitô family line to the present<br />

(Phelps 1996).<br />

Similar narratives of origin ascend the social strata. Although the previous<br />

narrative is preserved solely by means of oral tradition, historian Roy<br />

Ron notes similar mythic motifs in Japanese sword schools during the<br />

Tokugawa period. He observes that the historical documentation of a<br />

school’s lineage, along with such information as “the founder’s biography<br />

and some historical information relating to the style; often they included<br />

legends and myths of sacred secret transmission of knowledge from legendary<br />

warriors, supernatural beings, or from the divinities themselves to<br />

the founder’s ancestors. Such divine connection provided the school with<br />

authority and ‘proof’ of superior skills in an increasingly competitive world<br />

of swordsmanship.”<br />

In contrast, legends occur in a more contemporary setting and are often<br />

more widely disseminated, as is the story of the Maiden of Yue, a legend<br />

that reveals the principles of Chinese martial arts, including yin-yang<br />

theory (complementary opposition). It is also part of a larger story of how<br />

Gou Jian, king of the state of Yue, sought to strengthen his state by employing<br />

the best assets available (including women in this case). As a result<br />

he overcame his old opponent, the king of Wu, and became the dominant<br />

hegemon at the close of the Spring and Autumn period (496–473 B.C.).<br />

Legends Associated with Locales<br />

Legends of the Shaolin Monastery represent this narrative category well,<br />

since the site literally swims in an ocean of greater and lesser myths and legends<br />

formed from a core of facts. <strong>The</strong> monastery is the home of Chinese<br />

Chan (Zen) Buddhism, which is said to have been introduced by the Indian<br />

monk Bodhidharma around A.D. 525. History further records that thirteen<br />

Shaolin monks helped Tang emperor Taizong (given name Li Shimin) overcome<br />

a key opponent in founding the Tang dynasty. In the mid-sixteenth<br />

century, a form of staff fighting was named for the monastery. Numerous<br />

references from this period also cite martial arts practices among the<br />

Shaolin monks, and the heroic exploits of some of the monks in campaigns<br />

against Japanese pirates during this period brought them lasting fame as<br />

the Shaolin Monk Soldiers. <strong>The</strong>se basic shreds of fact provide the raw materials<br />

for constructing folk historical narrative.<br />

In discussing the more prominent traditional narratives associated<br />

with Shaolin Monastery, it is instructive to address them in the chronological<br />

order of their appearance on the stage of history. <strong>The</strong> earliest of these<br />

is the story (recorded ca. 960) of the monk Seng Zhou (ca. 560) who, in his<br />

youth, is said to have prayed to a temple guardian figure to help him become<br />

strong enough to ward off his bullying fellow acolytes. <strong>The</strong> guardian

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