Southern Dragon kung fu

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Southern Dragon Kung Fu (traditional name Lung Ying "Dragon Form"; Template:Zh) is a Kung Fu fighting style for Shaolin Boxing based on the Chinese dragon.

History

Historically, Southern Dragon style was described orally rather than by text. Modern Southern Dragon style's history can be traced to the monk Daai Yuk Sim Si, who was the abbot of Huashoutai (White Hair) temple on Mount Luofu.[1] No reliable records of the style's origin prior to Daai exist.

Southern Dragon style has roots in a combination of the local styles of the Hakka heartland in inland eastern Guangdong, and the style that the monk Ji Sin Sim Si taught in Guangdong and the neighboring province of Fujian in the 18th century.[2]

North of the Dongjiang, in the northwest of Boluo County in the prefecture of Huizhou in Guangdong Province, is the sacred mountain Luofushan. Luofushan is the site of many temples, including Huashoutai where, c. 1900, Daai Yuk taught Southern Dragon style to Lam Yiu Gwai, who in turn passed the art on to the many students of his schools in Guangzhou.[3]

Lam Yiu Gwai and Jeung Lai Chuen were good friends from their youth in the Dongjiang region of Huizhou, longtime training partners,[4] and later cousins by marriage. Lam and Jeung would open several schools together, and Southern Dragon style and Jeung's style of Bak Mei would go on to share many similarities.

A variation of the Southern Dragon style is taught by the Long Choo Kung Fu Society based in Penang, Malaysia, and with branches in Australia. Founded by Li Ah Yu and his father near the turn of the 20th century, this association claims it is teaching a Soft/Hard Dragon style originating from Fujian province.[5]

Methods and philosophy

Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Southern Dragons kung fu is essentially an internal qi cultivation method, but initialization training produces closer results to that of a hard, external style than the delicate approach an internal (like tai chi or baguazhang) would. In learning the moves of the style, the student will strike hard, block hard and rush into each position, with the idea of learning the proper place to be once each movement is complete. Eventually, the method of transmitting power is retained, and the physically strengthened body is able to make transitions in the proper, fluid manner. In turn, this dragon-like smoothness helps disguise the attack, making it extremely difficult for an adversary to effectively counter.

Once a purely physical semblance to flow has been mastered, the disciple incorporates the deep hissing sounds associated with the style to train chi flow. Inhaling is silent, but exhalation is deliberate, tense, and controlled. Inhaling lightens the body for aerial maneuvers, while exhaling drives power into each technique. Blocking is dispensed with, and parries or simple strikes substituted. At this point, novice and advanced student show very little in common.

On the highest level, an opponent is allowed to tire himself out, with evasion becoming the Dragon's key defense. Qi control is highly developed, and the degree to which the body must be moved to redirect or avoid impact is under greater control.

The forms (Taolu; 套路) that constitute this system are divided by complexity into three categories, and are enumerated below:

  • Basic
    • 16 Movements/Holes (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Passing Bridge Three Times (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Fierce Tiger Leaping Over Wall (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Rescue Master From Single Side (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Single Sword and Mount (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Press and Hit from Four Sides (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Eagle Claw (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Bridge Smashing (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
  • Intermediate
    • Touch Bridge (introduces sticking hands) (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Venomous Snake Moves Tongue (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Hua King's Fist (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Standing Five-Form (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Cross Standing Five-Form
    • Turn to Hook and Hit
    • Five Horses Returning to Stable (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
  • Advanced
    • Plum Flower Punch (Script error: No such module "Lang".)
    • Seven Ways of Plum Flower Punch (Script error: No such module "Lang".)

In each form, one is taught to "ride the wind", a phrase which in large part means follow rather than lead. Provide no opening without first letting your opponent open. Unlike the Crane style, which also relies heavily upon evasion as a tactic, the Dragon style evades primarily by rotation of upper or lower torso with straight and zig-zag stance movements, while the Crane stylist hops frequently to reposition the entire body. Both styles employ pinpoint strikes to vulnerable meridian targets, but the Dragon style also heavily uses tiger-like punches and clawing techniques, snake-like stance shifts, and leopard-like hit and run strikes to weaken a physically superior adversary. Southern Dragon kung fu also regularly employs low sweeping techniques, but these are not unique. Most senior stylists of any kung fu system use these on a weakened adversary.

Lung Ying Motto in traditional Chinese script
Lung Ying Motto

Dragon style in popular culture

Template:In popular culture

References

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External links

Template:Kung fu schools