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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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figure offers him meat to build his strength. Ironically, while the story is exaggerated,<br />

it may reveal something about the actual nature of monastic living<br />

during Buddhism’s early years in China, including loose adherence to<br />

the vegetarian dietary codes prescribed for Buddhists. Another much later<br />

legend (oral and of unknown origin) claims Tang emperor Taizong issued<br />

a decree exempting Shaolin monks from the strict Buddhist vegetarian diet<br />

because of their assistance in capturing one of the emperor’s opponents (a<br />

mix of fact and fiction).<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is only one narrative directly associated with an identifiable<br />

Shaolin martial art; this is the story (related on a stone tablet dated ca. 1517)<br />

of a kitchen worker who, the tale relates, is said to have transformed himself<br />

into a fierce guardian spirit called King Jinnaluo. According to this text,<br />

the worker in spirit form scared off a band of marauding Red Turban rebels<br />

with his fire-stoking staff and saved the monastery during the turbulence at<br />

the end of the Yuan dynasty (ca. 1368). Actually, the monastery is known<br />

to have been largely destroyed and to have been abandoned by the monks<br />

around this time. <strong>The</strong>refore, the story seems to have served a dual purpose:<br />

to warn later generations of monks to take their security duties seriously and<br />

(possibly) to reinforce the martial image of the place in order to ward off<br />

would-be transgressors. In any case, in the mid-sixteenth century, a form of<br />

staff fighting was named for the monastery.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next Shaolin narrative, which appears in Epitaph for Wang<br />

Zhengnan, written by the Ming patriot and historian Huang Zongxi in<br />

1669, is wrapped up in the politics of foreign Manchu rule over China. According<br />

to this story, the boxing practiced in Shaolin Monastery became<br />

known as the External School, in contrast to the Internal School, after the<br />

Daoist Zhang Sanfeng (ca. 1125) invented the latter. Here, Internal School<br />

opposition to the External School appears to symbolize Chinese resistance<br />

to Manchu rule. In the twentieth century, proponents of Yang-style taijiquan<br />

(tai chi ch’uan) adopted Zhang Sanfeng as their patriarch, giving this<br />

legend new life.<br />

Migratory Legends<br />

According to at least one of the origin legends circulating in the taijiquan<br />

repertoire, one day Zhang Sanfeng witnessed a battle between a crane and<br />

a snake, and from the experience he created taiji. It is probably not coincidental<br />

that this origin narrative is associated with more than one martial<br />

art. For example, Wu Mei (Ng Mui), reputed in legends of the Triad society<br />

(originally an anti-Qing, pro-Ming secret society, discussed below) to be<br />

one of the Five Elders who escaped following the burning of the Shaolin<br />

Monastery by the Qing, was said to have created yongchun (wing chun)<br />

boxing after witnessing a battle between a snake and a crane, or in some<br />

Folklore in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 127

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