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  2. Styles of Chinese martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Styles_of_Chinese_martial_arts

    Many Chinese martial arts styles are based or named after legends or historical figures. Examples of such styles based on legends and myths are the Eight Immortals and Dragon styles. Example of styles attributed to historical figures include Xingyiquan and its relationship to Yue Fei and tai chi which trace its origins to a Taoist Zhang Sanfeng.

  3. Chinese martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_martial_arts

    Examples of the northern styles include changquan and xingyiquan. Examples of the southern styles include Bak Mei, Wuzuquan, Choy Li Fut, and Wing Chun. Chinese martial arts can also be divided according to religion, imitative-styles (象形拳), and family styles such as Hung Gar (洪家). There are distinctive differences in the training ...

  4. Footwork (martial arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Footwork_(martial_arts)

    Circular movement patterns are an integral part of many forms of traditional Chinese martial arts, such as Baguazhang, Xingyiquan and Taijiquan, due principally to the strong influence of Tao philosophy. Circular footwork is also the basic method of movement in Enshin karate and derivative styles. Circular footwork functions in a way similar to ...

  5. Mobile Warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_Warfare

    The most notable example of Chinese mobile warfare was the Long March, a massive military retreat in which Mao marched in circles in Guizhou until he had confused the vastly larger armies pursuing him, and was then able to slip through Yunnan and Sichuan, although the retreat was completed by only one-tenth of the force that left for the Long ...

  6. Qigong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qigong

    Tai chi is a widely practiced Chinese internal martial style based on the theory of taiji, closely associated with qigong, and typically involving more complex choreographed movement coordinated with breath, done slowly for health and training, or quickly for self-defense. Many scholars consider tai chi to be a type of qigong, traced back to an ...

  7. Baguazhang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baguazhang

    Baguazhang (Chinese: 八卦掌; pinyin: bā guà zhǎng; Wade–Giles: pa-kua chang) is one of the three main Chinese martial arts of the Wudang school, the other two being tai chi and xingyiquan. It is more broadly grouped as an internal practice (or neijia).

  8. Philippine military says Chinese air force jets endangered ...

    www.aol.com/news/philippine-military-says...

    The Philippine military chief condemned Saturday what he said was the provocative actions of two Chinese air force aircraft that executed a dangerous maneuver and dropped flares in the path of a ...

  9. Neijia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neijia

    The term neijia and the distinction between internal and external martial arts first appears in Huang Zongxi's 1669 Epitaph for Wang Zhengnan. [2] Stanley Henning proposes that the Epitaph 's identification of the internal martial arts with the Taoism indigenous to China and of the external martial arts with the foreign Buddhism of Shaolin—and the Manchu Qing Dynasty to which Huang Zongxi ...