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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Yuanyun (1587–1671, usually pronounced Chin Gempin in Japanese), was<br />

a Renaissance man of sorts, who wrote some books, made pottery, and was<br />

apparently an interesting conversationalist. He resided for a while in a<br />

Buddhist temple in Edo (now Tokyo), where he was said to have been visited<br />

by three rônin (masterless samurai), Fukuno, Isogai, and Miura, and<br />

with whom he supposedly discussed boxing (quanfa in Chinese, kenpô in<br />

Japanese). According to the Kito-ryû Kenpô Stele (1779), located in the<br />

precincts of modern Tokyo’s Atago Shrine, “instruction in kempô began<br />

with the expatriate, Chen Yuanyun.” Tracing this association to the 1880s,<br />

one can find a connection to Kanô Jigorô, who is credited with founding<br />

modern jûdô.<br />

While the actual degree of Chen Yuanyun’s contribution is unknown,<br />

the reference to him on the Kitoryû Kenpô Stele gives some credence to the<br />

contention that at least some Japanese jûjutsu and jûdô techniques may<br />

have evolved from Ming-period Chinese bare-handed fighting methods, including<br />

boxing. Perhaps jûjutsu (pliant skills) evolved more from grappling,<br />

escape, and throwing techniques, which were not necessarily clearly<br />

distinguished from boxing at the time. Also, the Chinese skills may have<br />

been an ingredient added to indigenous Japanese atemi (striking) and combat<br />

sumô techniques. In any case, there remains a plausible argument for<br />

this Chinese contribution to Japanese martial arts.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Chinese origins of karate are more certain. By the middle of the<br />

nineteenth century, and possibly earlier, Chinese boxing appears to have<br />

entered Okinawa from Fujian, China. After being modified by the Okinawans,<br />

possibly with some of their own indigenous techniques, it was further<br />

introduced to the main Japanese islands by Funakoshi Gichin in 1922,<br />

and was developed into the modern sport of karatedô, “way of the empty<br />

hand,” or, thanks to Japanese adaptations of Chinese characters (kara<br />

meaning both “empty” and “Tang”), even “way of Tang hands” in reference<br />

to the Chinese dynasty that so strongly influenced Japanese culture. In<br />

fact, as further evidence of karate’s Chinese origins, the Okinawans originally<br />

even used the so-called Chinese or on pronunciation for the term<br />

Tang hands, that is, Tôde (long “o”) rather than karate.<br />

In 1917, the young Mao Zedong claimed that jûjutsu was a vestige of<br />

Chinese culture that was helping the Japanese maintain a “martial spirit”<br />

through physical culture in a manner similar to what he termed “the civilized<br />

countries of the world, with Germany in the lead.” Mao’s claim was<br />

not without justification.<br />

Stanley E. Henning<br />

See also Japan; Jûdô; Karate, Japanese; Karate, Okinawan; Kenpô;<br />

Okinawa; Wrestling and Grappling: China; Wrestling and Grappling:<br />

Japan<br />

Japanese <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>, Chinese Influences on 201

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