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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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618 Taijiquan (Tai Chi Ch’uan)<br />

traced to the seventeenth century. Written texts attributed to the eighteenth<br />

century, discovered in a salt shop in the nineteenth century, are augmented<br />

by the then-current scholarly thought of martial artists living through turbulent<br />

times in Yongnian, located in Hebei province. When taiji became<br />

popular in Beijing at the turn of the twentieth century, these writings, perceptions,<br />

and practices were solidified and adopted by all major styles and<br />

branches of the movement.<br />

<strong>The</strong> very term taiji comes from the Zhou dynasty and an anonymous<br />

text, the Yijing (I Ching; the Book of Changes). Over three thousand years<br />

ago, the author wrote, “In all changes exists taiji, which cause the two opposites<br />

in all things. <strong>The</strong> two opposites cause the four seasons, and the four<br />

seasons cause the eight natural phenomena.”<br />

Laozi, in about the fourth century B.C., wrote the Dao de Jing (Tao-te<br />

Ching), a text explaining the Dao, the nature of things and underlying principles.<br />

Through applying the principle of noncontention, one learns to master<br />

others.<br />

Others labeled as contributors to the philosophic transmission include<br />

the philosopher Fu Xi, and even the reclusive poet and explorer of mysterious<br />

powers, Xu Xuanping of the Tang dynasty (A.D. 618–907).<br />

Another famous Daoist, Zhang Sanfeng, is said by many to have been<br />

the actual founder of taiji. What is confusing is that records from Wudang<br />

Mountain, a stunningly beautiful place that has been the center of Taoism<br />

since the seventh century, include two Zhang Sanfengs—one from the twelfth<br />

century and another from the fourteenth century. Legends first written down<br />

in the 1867 Ma Tungwen manuscript, and adopted for many years by the<br />

Yang Family, credit Zhang Sanfeng as creator of taiji. In fact, most taiji manuals<br />

from 1921 on credit Zhang Sanfeng as the founder without research.<br />

According to legend, Zhang Sanfeng of the twelfth century was on the<br />

road while besieged by bandits and took refuge on Wudang Mountain. <strong>The</strong><br />

spirit of Wudang Mountain came in a dream and taught him a new method<br />

of fighting, taiji, and he easily defeated a hundred bandits. <strong>The</strong> Zhang Sanfeng<br />

of the fourteenth century is said to have been a “mad” alchemist<br />

searching for immortality by observing tortoises and cranes, two long-lived<br />

creatures. One day he observed a crane and snake fighting, and from this<br />

graceful battle he came up with the Thirteen Postures of Taiji.<br />

Both Zhang Sanfengs have been the subjects of many popular books<br />

and motion pictures. Both men combine the spiritual cultivation of Taoism<br />

with the skills of wushu, but historians have found no direct clear links.<br />

What is clear is a body of skills from Wenxian County, Henan<br />

province, that represents the beginnings of all major forms of taijiquan.<br />

This includes physical forms and training practices stemming from the seventeenth<br />

century and some clear writings and supporting historical data.

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