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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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of fighting was believed to be the Buddhist Shaolin Temple. Although these<br />

traditional assumptions have been questioned recently, the power of this<br />

tradition and the related tradition of a dichotomy between internal (Daoist)<br />

and external (Buddhist) arts is demonstrated by the adoption of a variation<br />

of the traditional categories of Wudang (internal, taijiquan, baguazhang,<br />

and xingyiquan) and Shaolin (external, all other styles) for the two major<br />

branches of their Chinese boxing schools by the Nationalist government–sponsored<br />

Central <strong>Martial</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Institute in 1927. In the 1950s, following<br />

the Nationalists’ lead, the Communists’ Physical Culture and Sports<br />

Commission integrated traditional martial arts into their physical education<br />

programs and developed standardized practice and competitive routines<br />

for boxing labeled as changquan (“long boxing”), nanquan (“southern<br />

boxing”), and taijiquan (the only one of the internal systems so<br />

enfranchised). <strong>The</strong> distinction of northern (legs) versus southern (hands)<br />

that is used as a traditional designation between the “external” (or Shaolin)<br />

arts is actually derived from a very ancient aphorism that alludes to what<br />

have been regarded as the main practices of each specific method. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

differences are attributed to geographic conditions that were believed to<br />

play a role in the development of both northern fist arts, or beiquan shu,<br />

and southern fist arts, or nanquan shu.<br />

According to this traditional theory, the people who lived in the north<br />

occupied an environment that was physically and socially different from<br />

southern China. <strong>The</strong> area in which they lived was characterized by wideopen<br />

expanses. Land transportation required skilled horsemanship. Moreover,<br />

since the cultural centers of China from approximately 2200 B.C. were<br />

located in the north, the population had greater access to education than did<br />

inhabitants of southern China. To a degree at least, the quality of a man’s education<br />

was to be seen in the quality of his calligraphy. <strong>The</strong>se facts provide<br />

the raw material for the traditional theory of the north-south distinction.<br />

<strong>The</strong> martial arts popularized in the north were called by many names,<br />

among them changquan (long fist) and Northern Shaolin. “Long fist” is a<br />

double entendre: <strong>The</strong> forms themselves were quite long, but more than<br />

that, the movements were elongated, with many acrobatic movements, particularly<br />

kicks, in them. <strong>The</strong>se characteristics are believed to be due in part<br />

to the geographic area in which practitioners lived. <strong>The</strong> living conditions<br />

made their legs quite strong, and they capitalized on that through the development<br />

and use of all manner of punishing kicks. Combat on an open,<br />

stable surface encouraged the development of wide stances and high leaps<br />

and kicks. <strong>The</strong> desire to protect the hands also influenced the fighting<br />

styles. An injured hand impairs the ability to write well.<br />

In contrast, the people south of the Chang River were relegated to<br />

very cramped living conditions. In this area of rice paddies, coastal shal-<br />

Boxing, Chinese Shaolin Styles 33

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