A Short History Of Hsing-I Chuan
Although there is no agreement among historians and authorities
on the subject as to the origin of Hsing-I Chuan, available
documents suggest that the origin of Hsing-I Chuan should be dated
at least as far back as the Liang Dynasty (ca.550 AD).
Chi Lung-Feng is often credited with being the founder of
Hsing-I Chuan. This writer believes that it is more likely he was
responsible for standardizing the Art. Born or residing at or
near Shanghai in the late Ming Dynasty, he supposedly learned it
from a wandering Taoist boxer in the Chung-Nan Mountains. Chi, an
expert pugilist and spear fighter, passed his art to Ts'ao Chi-Wu,
who was to become the commanding general of Shansi Province in the
K'ang Hsi reign of the Ch'ing Dynasty, and to Ma Hsueh-Li. Tsao
Chi Wu taught the Tai brothers who taught Li Neng Jan who taught
Kuo Yun Shen ('divine crushing fist'). It was the students of Kuo
Yun Shen who were most responsible for the proliferation of
Hsing-I Chuan.
During the late Southern Song Dynasty, Hsing-I Chuan was taught
to the soldiers in Marshall Yueh Fei's army, and due to the Art's
popularity, Marshall Yueh is often credited with being the founder
of the Art.
Due to its Taoist heritage, and to the fact that the Five Fists
of Hsing-I Chuan are found in Wutang Tai-Chi Chuan, many Hsing-I
practitioners believe that Hsing-I, like Tai Chi Chuan, also
originated at the Wutang Mountains. |