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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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A 74-year-old<br />

Buddhist monk<br />

practices boxing exercises<br />

at a Shaolin<br />

monastery near<br />

Zengzhou, Henan,<br />

China, 1981.<br />

(Lowell Georgia/<br />

Corbis)<br />

34 Boxing, Chinese Shaolin Styles<br />

lows, and urbanized settings, many<br />

worked the waters in trade, commerce,<br />

and fishing. In fact, a portion of the inhabitants<br />

spent most of their lives on<br />

the boats that sailed the coasts and inland<br />

waterways. <strong>The</strong> primary demands<br />

for physical labor were placed on the<br />

muscle groups of the upper body. As another<br />

contrast, the distance from the<br />

cultural centers of the north meant in<br />

many cases that a southerner’s education<br />

was gained at home, and the vast<br />

majority of them were functional illiterates<br />

who relied on professional readers<br />

to read official decrees and personal letters<br />

and to write for them when the<br />

need arose. <strong>The</strong> factors of relatively<br />

greater upper body strength and the decreased<br />

need for fine-motor skill utilizing<br />

finger dexterity led to a reliance on<br />

punching as opposed to kicking techniques.<br />

<strong>The</strong> “short-hitting” styles of the<br />

south were marked by constricted, inclose<br />

movements, ones that could be<br />

employed in tight alleyways, on the<br />

decks of boats, and in other cramped<br />

quarters. <strong>The</strong> southern fighting styles<br />

also developed, for the most part, shorter forms, although a given southern<br />

system (e.g., Hung Gar [pinyin hongjiaquan] and Choy Lay Fut [pinyin<br />

cailifoquan]) could contain a greater number of forms in its curriculum<br />

than some northern systems.<br />

One might also surmise that the restrictions placed upon people due<br />

to the restrictions of various articles of clothing would play a role in defensive<br />

techniques as well. <strong>The</strong> cold climate of the north and the clothing<br />

adapted to such an environment would no doubt hinder the use of hand<br />

techniques, but to a lesser extent the use of the legs. <strong>The</strong> south was more<br />

subtropical, and the clothing appropriate for that environment allowed the<br />

unencumbered development of the upper-body techniques suitable for the<br />

social conditions previously described. Various weapons also saw their use<br />

dictated by their geographic location. In the north one would have the luxury<br />

of being able to use a long pole arm, such as a spear or long sword, and

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