The word southern would imply no. Songshan is a northern system. They could be related in the way that we could be distant cousins, but southern Eagle Claw would not be a system from Songshan, a northern style.
By northern Eagle Claw I would assume you mean Ying Zhao Fan Zi Quan. This style is often called Northern Shaolin Eagle Claw. It's not a Songshan system. It may be related, but it is a different style. Search it, there's lots of info.
Eagle Claw at Songshan is a different system then YZFZQ. There may be common roots, but they are not the same.
LOL! You caught me...... that was actually a quote from The Ancient One, but I'm on my Android pad and it's a real pain typing on it, so I cheated.
Let's just keep this between us gentleman, The Ancient One doesn't need to know and I'll do some extra training as penance!
Shaolin techniques or styles can be listed with certainty, and did they include animal styles?
Yes. Naming martial arts tactics, forms and even entire military units after animals goes back to ancient times. This is well documented. There are 10 animals, connect by legend to Bai Yu Feng in the tradition I practice: dragon, snake, leopard, crane, monkey, pelican, horse/mustang, water buffalo, tiger, elephant. These are not separate sets but are integrated. Other sets include the butterfly (蝴蝶入堂, 蝴蝶串花; 蝴蝶歸源) but only the monkey really imitates the actions of the animal.
'Modern' wushu was developed a decade before the Cultural Revolution and was based on traditional martial arts, as has been pointed out in other posts. I believe the main early members of the Chinese Wushu Association Committee included: Li Menghua, Wang Ziping, Mao Bohao, there were others but they were the key players. Cai Longyun may have been part of the team as well, but I am not so sure.Lastly, does anyone know who was actually consulted during the creation of government sponsored Wu Shu after the Cultural Revolution?
What are you looking for? percentages? I'm not sure what you are asking, but yes modern wushu was developed out of traditional northern styles during the early 1950's - note that this was well before the Cultural Revolution. The base style was Hong Chuan Quan (long first). Our tradition claims that Xiao Hong Chang Quan 小洪長拳, and Da Hong Chang Quan 大洪長拳 were the basic testing sets of Shaolin for generations. Our sets have some resemblance to those practiced at Shaolin today, but are much more like northern long fist.How much of competition Wu Shu was developed from traditional Wu Shu(a) and real Shaolin Kung Fu(b)?
My teacher trained during the late 1920s and his teachers trained in the mid and late 1800s in Henan. When they left for Beijing Luoyang was in hell of a mess – the Nian rebellion, extreme droughts, floods, high unemployment rate and widespread use of opium had crippled the region and made life there next to intolerable.
Last edited by r.(shaolin); 12-30-2012 at 12:17 AM.
That's what the teacher says to the student when he doesn't know the answer to the student's question.Falkor...you got do some more research and reading up on Kung Fu before you try to have this debate. You don't seem to grasp some very fundamental, well understood facts about Kung Fu; it's making it impossible for you to understand what people are telling you.
What makes you think I don't understand the difference? Is it something in particular I said?There are literally hundreds of systems that call themselves Shaolin Kung Fu. Some were partially based on Shaolin, some probably just used the name. When you say Shaolin, you mean the style called Songshan Shaolin which developed in and around the temple. You keep using the word Songshan, but don't seem to know the difference.
How can they call themselves Shaolin systems if they are not SongShan? Surely it's just fake/fabricated. I never heard anyone say Shaolin Hung Gar or Shaolin Wing Ching. They just say that those styles may have originated at Shaolin (Song Shan), but are unable to prove it.Bak Siu Lum, (northern Shaolin) is a different system. Related, but not the same. Northern Eagle Claw, Hun Gar, Wing Chun, Choy Li Fut, ect. are all called "Shaolin" systems. They are not the same as what is/was taught at the temple.
Anything can be translated from Mandarin to Cantonese and vice versa, so, no, I don't seem to understand this.You don't seem to understand when a style uses Mandarin or Cantonese. Anything that uses Cantonese is not northern; and can't be directly from Songshan. What's so hard about that?
That's exactly what I guessed!I also don't have Meir's book handy, but when you talked about "Hong" possibly having no relation, I'm pretty sure he was talking about a different, southern system there. Songshan is based off Hong Quan.
Well, the style is there in the earliest of Shaolin manuals and the illustration of one of the 8 drunkard forms from 1978-1631 (=?) years before looks just like a scene from Jackie Chan's film.There is a famous southern form called "The Eight Drunken Immortals." Not to be confused with the myth that inspired it. That form, I believe, was the inspiration for the Jackie Chan movie you mentioned. I'm not 100% on that. I don't know the form, but that one is certainly not a Songshan form. That's not saying there's not drunken forms at Shaolin. There are various styles with drunken forms. Lots of forms have the same names.
Last edited by falkor; 12-30-2012 at 02:45 AM.
Why can't you guys show me a 18th/19th century map of Henan showing all these villages intact? If I had to prove the existence of buildings in my country several hundred years ago then it would be **** simple for me to do so. Those villages have only grown up around the temple due to it's modern day commercial appeal. That's why Tai Chi was developed in a village more spaced apart, at 35 miles away. Everyone knows that villages are never joined together, and no sources talk about a complex of village buildings surrounding the temple. Even natives will not be permitted inside certain public buildings unless they are some kind of member (I use the word in the broadest sense).
Cheers for the info!Yes. Naming martial arts tactics, forms and even entire military units after animals goes back to ancient times. This is well documented. There are 10 animals, connect by legend to Bai Yu Feng in the tradition I practice: dragon, snake, leopard, crane, monkey, pelican, horse/mustang, water buffalo, tiger, elephant. These are not separate sets but are integrated. Other sets include the butterfly (蝴蝶入堂, 蝴蝶串花; 蝴蝶歸源) but only the monkey really imitates the actions of the animal.
Did these guys all study Hong Chuan Quan or consult masters of that style?'Modern' wushu was developed a decade before the Cultural Revolution and was based on traditional martial arts, as has been pointed out in other posts. I believe the main early members of the Chinese Wushu Association Committee included: Li Menghua, Wang Ziping, Mao Bohao, there were others but they were the key players. Cai Longyun may have been part of the team as well, but I am not so sure.
Does Hong Chuan Quan (or related sets) include the Monkey you spoke of that actually imitates the monkey (in a loose sense)? What does the traditional Song Shan Crane look like or is there no traditional Song Shan Crane as part of Hong Chuan Quan?What are you looking for? percentages? I'm not sure what you are asking, but yes modern wushu was developed out of traditional northern styles during the early 1950's - note that this was well before the Cultural Revolution. The base style was Hong Chuan Quan (long first). Our tradition claims that Xiao Hong Chang Quan 小洪長拳, and Da Hong Chang Quan 大洪長拳 were the basic testing sets of Shaolin for generations. Our sets have some resemblance to those practiced at Shaolin today, but are much more like northern long fist.
If Song Shan Shaolin Temple has been practising traditional Hong Quan for several hundred years then who was practising traditional Wu Shu before it became a sport just before the Culturual Revolution?
You can think of it as a family name. Generations later, descendants may have moved to different regions, speak different languages, mixed with different blood, look quite different, but retain the same family name.
I find this very interesting since I practice both, but can't convince anyone of it online without demonstrating it. It's not something you can see, unless you have learned both and understand what's happening in each movement.Originally Posted by RenDaHai
In the Xiaohongquan I have, the first section contains every single basic hand action found in Siu-nim-tau, including the foundation for the vertical punch, as well as the new concepts introduced in Cham-kiu, just with more footwork, larger motions, and of course other techniques not taken in Wing Chun.
The beginning even has the exact sequence for one side of the single sticking hands drill. Taan-sau, palm strike, bong-sau.
One could in essence teach the Wing Chun barehanded system just using Xiaohongquan.
Well for example, this statement.
Of course anything can be translated.
And Wing Chun uses southern language because they are a southern style. Songshan uses northern language because it's a northern style. If the system was developed or made famous in a certain region, it's reflected in the name of the system and what language they refer to their forms/techs!!!
When you keep asking if X Cantonese style, is part of Y Mandarin style, it implies you don't know the difference.
As I said, I'm not sure on that, suffice to say, there are different drunken styles. I have read the book, (actually just bought it recently at Gene's suggestion, I'm no KF historian,) and seen that movie...I haven't seen the movie in a long time and I don't remember for sure, but I thought it was loosely based on the southern form. Could very well be wrong. Remember, it's just a movie. He could of just made it all up from wushu...I don't know for sure...not everything you see in the movies is an accurate portrayal of a system.
Villages that have just recently had roads made to them? They built the modern, commercial villages before the roads?
Dude, I am currently in a tiny village, that you would have an awful hard time finding on any old fashioned map; and there's another little village 2 miles away and another one 2 miles in the other direction.
Have you never left your own town? Trust me, there are other villages out there.
Villages are never joined together? Have you ever heard of the suburbs? LOL