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bawang
08-26-2015, 01:26 PM
hello i am super duper expert in kung fu. if u have any question about chinese weapon i can answer u. thx

David Jamieson
08-26-2015, 02:03 PM
hello i am super duper expert in kung fu. if u have any question about chinese weapon i can answer u. thx

what's that one called with the blade and the thingy and has that tassly thingy on the thing with the thing? You know what I'm saying? What is that?

GeneChing
08-26-2015, 02:22 PM
There's no way you will be able to best my post today.

Lingerie-Fighting-Championships (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?68893-Lingerie-Fighting-Championships) FTW!

This day is mine.

:cool:

bawang
08-26-2015, 03:28 PM
what's that one called with the blade and the thingy and has that tassly thingy on the thing with the thing? You know what I'm saying? What is that?

it call gwailo rice bowl attraction device

i will answer all question about kung fu weapon srs

Kellen Bassette
08-26-2015, 06:22 PM
How many were historically used in war, (opposed to those invented for performance)?

bawang
08-27-2015, 06:45 AM
How many were historically used in war, (opposed to those invented for performance)?

every traditional kung fu weapon no matter how strange looking was used in war, even the modern performance toothpick midget spears had legitimate use (used to fire off primitive gunpowder shots, shortened to prevent breaking)

i will answer all questions about weird weapons

Kellen Bassette
08-27-2015, 05:22 PM
What was the military use of the three sectional staff?

bawang
08-27-2015, 10:03 PM
What was the military use of the three sectional staff?

backup cavalry weapon

MightyB
09-08-2015, 07:50 AM
How many were historically used in war, (opposed to those invented for performance)?

Depends on the Dynasty,

In the real early dynasties (stone-age through Spring Autumn) you would have seen the bow and chariot, along with a lot of long handled axes and hand axes leading up to the invention of the Ji which would have both a spear and axe head. But the spear ended up being more practical over time because both mounted and unmounted soldiers could use it and you could use it in formations.

Universally - horse archers were pretty much used in every dynasty after Spring Autumn, then archer infantry, spear, spear and shield, dao/broadsword, and broadsword and shield.



Worth noting because of widespread use are - crossbow, light cavalry, and long handled dao called modao (Chinese: 陌刀) 9586.

the jian was mostly ceremonial, all other weapons were one-offs and not in widespread use. The theatrical device of heroes using special weapons gave rise to a lot of the various weaponry you see today.

MightyB
09-08-2015, 08:02 AM
Something that you all might be interested in is this speed archery demonstration because it'll give you some idea of the significance and impact that a bow would have had in the hands of a skilled archer.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEG-ly9tQGk

MightyB
09-08-2015, 08:37 AM
This is a good book if you guys are interested in the evolution of Chinese Martial Arts.

http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/history/east-asian-history/chinese-martial-arts-antiquity-twenty-first-century
9587

GeneChing
09-08-2015, 05:09 PM
This is a good book if you guys are interested in the evolution of Chinese Martial Arts.

http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/history/east-asian-history/chinese-martial-arts-antiquity-twenty-first-century
9587

I was just discussing Peter Lorge (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?62608-Chinese-Martial-Arts-From-Antiquity-to-the-Twenty-First-Century-by-Peter-Lorge) with Ben Judkins (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?68867-The-Creation-of-Wing-Chun-by-Benjamin-N-Judkins-and-Jon-Nielson).

Okay, my martial scholar name-dropping is done for today. :cool:

Kellen Bassette
09-08-2015, 06:11 PM
I'm actually surprised archery doesn't feature prominently in tcma training. Archery was certainly important to warfare.

bawang
09-08-2015, 08:21 PM
I'm actually surprised archery doesn't feature prominently in tcma training. Archery was certainly important to warfare.

archery was very prominently featured in tcma training. just not post republic money making kung fu. you cant milk people teaching archery. it takes like 5 minutes





the jian was mostly ceremonial, all other weapons were one-offs and not in widespread use. The theatrical device of heroes using special weapons gave rise to a lot of the various weaponry you see today.

the jian and all the theater weapons were real weapons that were widely used in the song dynasty, the apex period of cold weapons warfare before firearms

jian - back up cataphract weapon for finishing heavy armor, used like a dagger.
guan dao - elite horse skirmishers
various mace - heavy cavalry backup weapon, chosen over jian based on preference
monk spade - combat shovel from elite engineer corps, tunneling and trench digging
hammer - combat hammer from elite engineer corps, for assembling siege engines
axe - elite shield breaking troops
giant axe and hammer - elite siege assault troops for breaking doors and barriers, disabling siege engines

B.Tunks
09-08-2015, 08:46 PM
Yeah, jian was the primary short bladed weapon from Spring & Autumn right up until Song/Yuan.

MightyB
09-09-2015, 05:47 AM
again, it depends on the dynasty -

even though the jian fell out of widespread battlefield use, it was still a revered weapon of the elite aristocrat.

Halberds were extremely popular during the three kingdoms, but the spear just ended up being the more practical weapon. Eventually rifles, canons, and pistols found their way to the battlefield.

one thing I know for sure is that since I started looking at the academic books on Chinese martial arts that focus on archaeological evidence and authentic historical writings... Bawang is right and telling the truth about historical Chinese martial arts.

The real history is actually better and more interesting than the myths that are often told.

MightyB
09-09-2015, 06:28 AM
the jian and all the theater weapons were real weapons that were widely used in the song dynasty, the apex period of cold weapons warfare before firearms

jian - back up cataphract weapon for finishing heavy armor, used like a dagger.
guan dao - elite horse skirmishers
various mace - heavy cavalry backup weapon, chosen over jian based on preference
monk spade - combat shovel from elite engineer corps, tunneling and trench digging
hammer - combat hammer from elite engineer corps, for assembling siege engines
axe - elite shield breaking troops
giant axe and hammer - elite siege assault troops for breaking doors and barriers, disabling siege engines

this is what I was talking about - real history is interesting and paints a better picture of how the weapons would be used than the myths. I can picture a force of men wielding giant axes and hammers smashing the heck out of things and that's really cool. That would make for a better movie than wire worked flying swordsmen IMO.

GeneChing
09-09-2015, 08:35 AM
a
monk spade - combat shovel from elite engineer corps, tunneling and trench digging

Most likely apocryphal. There's no archeological evidence to support their existence beyond temple altar displays and most of those are symbolic, not practical. Read The Spade, the Whip and the Mountain Gate (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/magazine/article.php?article=1042)from our 2012 Shaolin Special (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/magazine/article.php?article=1036). Get your monk spades here (http://www.martialartsmart.com/45-84cs.html).

Elite engineer corps...:rolleyes:

bawang
09-09-2015, 09:52 AM
Most likely apocryphal. There's no archeological evidence to support their existence beyond temple altar displays and most of those are symbolic, not practical. Read The Spade, the Whip and the Mountain Gate (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/magazine/article.php?article=1042)from our 2012 Shaolin Special (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/magazine/article.php?article=1036). Get your monk spades here (http://www.martialartsmart.com/45-84cs.html).

Elite engineer corps...:rolleyes:

everything i said is from song military manual wu jing zong yao. axe head shaped combat shovels were widely used in the song dynasty as entrenching tools and backup weapons. the moon cresent butt spike is ceremonial but was a separate weapon used to defend city walls.

chinese folk lore from long fist says they are two separate types of combat shovels that were combined together for ceremonial and aesthetic reasons, the sun shaped shovel and moon shaped shovel.

chinese engineer corps were the best siege engineers in the world. mongols used them to conquer bagdad.

bawang
09-09-2015, 10:59 AM
this is what I was talking about - real history is interesting and paints a better picture of how the weapons would be used than the myths. I can picture a force of men wielding giant axes and hammers smashing the heck out of things and that's really cool. That would make for a better movie than wire worked flying swordsmen IMO.

song dynasty was the golden age of chinese cold weapon warfare. i agree that a realistic movie about it would be ossum

B.Tunks
09-09-2015, 09:19 PM
again, it depends on the dynasty -

even though the jian fell out of widespread battlefield use, it was still a revered weapon of the elite aristocrat

All due respect, that was from Qing onwards (though definitely started to decline in the Yuan, for obvious reasons).

MightyB
09-10-2015, 06:13 AM
All due respect, that was from Qing onwards (though definitely started to decline in the Yuan, for obvious reasons).

"Chinese Martial Arts from Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century" by Peter Lorge, Cambridge University Press, Pages 69-70, The Han Dynasty Hundred Events and Martial Arts


A new form of the long sword (Jian) appeared about this time. The Ring Pommel or Round Grip Sword, originally a cavalry weapon, came into widespread use during the early Han dynasty. This was a single-edged, straight sword, very similar in overall form to the long sword. There was no hilt to protect the hand or separate the grip from the blade. Archaeological finds of this form of weapon have lengths between 85 and 114 centimeters. The advantage of the single-edged sword was that the back, or dull side, of the sword could be thickened to strengthen the weapon as a whole. It was a much sturdier weapon than the long sword (jian), and much less prone to breaking. The sword retained its point but improved its ability to hack or cut. The heavier back also added weight to hacking swings. This form of sword spread to the rest of east and southeast Asia.

The sword began to displace the long sword (jian) on the battlefield, particularly when paired with a square or rectangular shield. Depictions of battles toward the end of the Han dynasty show bows and arrows, and swords and shields among the combatants. This is true of both the cavalry and infantry. The growing ubiquity of the sword within the military was a tribute to its greater durability - and probably its improved hacking ability as well.

The author described earlier in the book that when he refers to "long sword", he's referring to a double-edged jian weapon, and "sword" refers to the single edged sword, or dao.

MightyB
09-10-2015, 06:21 AM
from the above mentioned book, page 78 The Six Dynasties


Battlefield weapon use was changing in the third century, continuing trends begun during the Han dynasty. Two particular trends are clearly visible in the Three Kingdoms period: the rise of the spear over the halberd, and the identification of horse archery with steppe martial practice. A third change, to the near exclusive use of the single-edged sword on the battlefield, occurred near the end or shortly after the Three Kingdoms period.

MightyB
09-10-2015, 06:38 AM
continuing the above post, from pages 82 through 84


The third trend in weapons use that had begun during the Han and became fixed in Chinese martial arts soon after the Three Kingdoms period was the use of the single-edged sword as virtually the only close combat weapon. The sword could be used alone or, as it was most often used on the battlefield, paired with a shield. Straight, double-edged swords, or long swords (as I have designated them in this book), remained in limited use as personal weapons of self-defense or performance weapons. They were generally lighter weight and less durable than single-edged, curved swords. The long sword was a more elegant weapon, and the weapon of choice for female sword dance performers, officials, and some expert warriors.

so basically the jian became a status symbol, and, like I said, it wasn't used on the battlefield. The book goes on to describe how some court officials actually wore wooden jian with decorated jade pommels because the jian was a status symbol, not a weapon of war.

one of my favorite passages from the book is this on page 86...


The ruler of Wu, Sun Quan, during the Three Kingdoms period, was always nervous when he visited his wife because she had over a hundred female attendants all armed with swords. These weapons were not for show alone, and the fact that these women carried swords (dao), not long swords (jian), in the Three Kingdoms Period alerts us to the martial atmosphere Sun Quan's wife established for her boudoir.

bawang
09-10-2015, 09:01 PM
continuing the above post, from pages 82 through 84



so basically the jian became a status symbol, and, like I said, it wasn't used on the battlefield. The book goes on to describe how some court officials actually wore wooden jian with decorated jade pommels because the jian was a status symbol, not a weapon of war.

one of my favorite passages from the book is this on page 86...

you are right. the jian became obsolete very early in the han dynasty. short jian was sometimes used later as an extra fancy dagger.

B.Tunks
09-14-2015, 06:51 PM
Thanks MB. To be specific I was referring mainly to the short jian - still commonly used at the time of the introduction of straight single edge blade in the Han, rather than the modern form. But yeah, maybe I should rephrase to 'predominant for half of Chinese history' rather than until Song/Yuan.

MightyB
09-15-2015, 05:53 AM
Thanks MB. To be specific I was referring mainly to the short jian - still commonly used at the time of the introduction of straight single edge blade in the Han, rather than the modern form. But yeah, maybe I should rephrase to 'predominant for half of Chinese history' rather than until Song/Yuan.

I should clarify that you're not wrong about the long jian - because some expert martial artists would have still used the jian because long sword fencing was regarded as a mark of the elite. There are descriptions in history of what the author called "the knight errant" who specialized in the jian that gave rise to the popular image of the wandering warrior.

The dao became the primary weapon of the regular military because it required less training time and they were durable.

B.Tunks
09-15-2015, 04:16 PM
I should clarify that you're not wrong about the long jian - because some expert martial artists would have still used the jian because long sword fencing was regarded as a mark of the elite. There are descriptions in history of what the author called "the knight errant" who specialized in the jian that gave rise to the popular image of the wandering warrior.

The dao became the primary weapon of the regular military because it required less training time and they were durable.

True. Also worked well against horses and heavy armour and complimented use of the shield. Definitely became the most effective blade for the battlefield (as you've said all along). Prob the heyday was intro and development of variants of turk/mongol sabre which were far more effective than the earlier straight backed dao. Those early dao were really just smashers/hackers with stabbing tip - unless I'm mistaken. Bawang would know.

bawang
09-15-2015, 09:22 PM
True. Also worked well against horses and heavy armour and complimented use of the shield. Definitely became the most effective blade for the battlefield (as you've said all along). Prob the heyday was intro and development of variants of turk/mongol sabre which were far more effective than the earlier straight backed dao. Those early dao were really just smashers/hackers with stabbing tip - unless I'm mistaken. Bawang would know.

generally both mongol and chinese cavalry used more curved dao for ride by slashing and straighter dao for prolonged combat. chinese infantry use less curved dao