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  2. Mu ren zhuang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu_ren_zhuang

    Mu ren zhuang (Chinese: 木人桩; pinyin: Mù Rén Zhuāng; lit. 'Wooden Man Post') or Mook Yan Jong (also known as The Wing-Chun Dummy or simply The Wooden Dummy internationally), is a training tool used in various styles of Chinese martial arts, most notably that of Wing Chun and other kung fu styles of Southern China.

  3. Shaolin kung fu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaolin_kung_fu

    In the Nickelodeon animated series Avatar: The Last Airbender, the practice of "firebending" is based on Shaolin moves. The ABC TV series Kung Fu (1972-1974) starring David Carradine as a fugitive Shaolin monk traveling the Western United States in search of his brother helped to popularize Shaolin Kung Fu with the general American TV audience.

  4. Peng Zhang Li - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peng_Zhang_Li

    2010 Zhang Li made his directing debut in the martial art drama Last Kung Fu Monk where he also played the leading role of the Shaolin Monk Li Long. A story of a Shaolin Monk who travels to New York but ends up in trouble with the Mafia. 2011 Zhang Li acted and directed his second movie The Resistance, a WWII drama mix with Ninja action and ...

  5. China’s Shaolin monks are known for their incredible ...

    www.aol.com/china-shaolin-monks-known-incredible...

    Over time, their rigorous physical training became inexorably linked with their quest to achieve enlightenment. Today, Shaolin kung fu is widely known, and the monks’ feats in athleticism have ...

  6. Wang Bo (martial artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wang_Bo_(Martial_Artist)

    Wang Bo was born in a rural village of Shandong Province, China on November 2, 1989. The family relocated to the Shaolin village on Mount Song in central Henan Province, home to the Shaolin Temple, a Chán Buddhist monastery built in 495 A.D., considered to be the birthplace of Shaolin Kung Fu [4] and associated with many other Chinese Martial Arts.

  7. Ng Mui - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ng_Mui

    Legend has it that the Five-Pattern System was jointly created by the Buddhist nun Ng Mui, and Miu Hin, an unshaved disciple of the Siu Lam Monastery. Through careful observation, and imagination, these two kung fu experts imitated the movements of the creatures—how they jump, how they paw, and how they use their wings, beaks, jaws, or claws, how they coil up, how they rush forward and ...

  8. Bodhidharma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodhidharma

    At Shaolin Monastery, the monks informed them that Bodhidharma was dead and had been buried in a hill behind the temple. The grave was exhumed and was found to contain a single shoe. The monks then said, "Master has gone back home" and prostrated three times: "For nine years, he had remained and nobody knew him; Carrying a shoe in hand he went ...

  9. San Te - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Te

    San Te or San-De (Chinese: 三德) monk was a Shaolin martial arts disciple who trained under monk Zhi Shan. The title San-De means "Three Harmonies" or "Three Virtues". He lived in the early 18th century and resided at the Xichan Monastery after leaving the main Shaolin Monastery. San Te has been depicted in several Hong Kong-produced films.

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