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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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other supposedly discovered the treatise in a salt store, remains one of<br />

the fascinating uncertainties of modern martial arts history. Suffice it to<br />

note here that the term “taijiquan” is only found in the title of the treatise,<br />

while the treatise itself is essentially a concise, articulate summary of basic<br />

Chinese martial arts theory, not necessarily the preserve of a single style of<br />

Chinese boxing.<br />

As noted above, the traditional history of yongchun maintains that<br />

this southern Chinese boxing system was invented by a Buddhist nun<br />

named Wu Mei (Ng Mui) who had escaped from the Shaolin Temple in<br />

Hunan (or in some versions, Fujian) province when it was razed in the eighteenth<br />

century after an attack by the dominant forces of the Qing dynasty<br />

(1644–1911) that officially suppressed the martial arts, particularly among<br />

Ming (1368–1644) loyalists. After her escape and as the result of witnessing<br />

a fight between a fox (or snake, in some histories) and a crane, Wu Mei<br />

created a fighting system capable of defeating the existing martial arts practiced<br />

by the Manchu forces and Shaolin defectors. Moreover, owing to its<br />

simplicity, it could be learned in a relatively short period of time. <strong>The</strong> style<br />

was transmitted to Yan Yongchun, a young woman whom Wu Mei had<br />

protected from an unwanted suitor. <strong>The</strong> martial art took its name from its<br />

creator’s student.<br />

Traditional histories of yongchun (and of other systems that claim ties<br />

to it) portray a particularly close connection between yongchun practitioners<br />

and the traveling Chinese opera performers known as the “Red Junk”<br />

performers after the boats that served as both transportation and living<br />

quarters for the troupes. <strong>The</strong>se troupes reportedly served as havens for<br />

Ming loyalists involved in the resistance against the Qing rulers and offered<br />

refuge to all manner of martial artists.<br />

Incontrovertible historical evidence of the exploits of Bodhidharma,<br />

Yue Fei, and Wu Mei has been blurred, if not eradicated, by the passing<br />

centuries. Details from the biographies of such figures remain malleable<br />

and serve the ends of the groups that pass along their life histories. Recently,<br />

arguments have been presented, in fact, that suggest that Wu Mei<br />

and Yan Yongchun are fictions into whose biographies have been compressed<br />

the more mundane history of a martial art. Such may be the case<br />

for many of the folk heroes who predate the contemporary age. Even in the<br />

case of twentieth-century figures, traditional patterns emerge.<br />

Japanese karate master Yamaguchi Gôgen exemplifies the contemporary<br />

martial arts folk hero—particularly within the karate community and<br />

especially among students of his own Gôjû-ryû system. Peter Urban, a leading<br />

United States Gôjû master, has compiled many of the orally circulated<br />

tales of Yamaguchi. Typical of these narratives is the tale of Yamaguchi’s<br />

captivity in a Chinese prison camp in Manchuria. Urban recounts the oral<br />

Folklore in the <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 131

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