Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - The "Sun Sect" is the real martial arts sects and masters in China today.

The "Sun Sect" is the real martial arts sects and masters in China today.

The seven schools and nine schools are often mentioned in martial arts novels. It is said that these sects in the central martial arts is a famous school, and on behalf of the seven schools of martial arts is the strongest in the jianghu, the most first-class martial arts sects. This is a novelist's claim, but not credible. It only exists in the fictional world of martial arts and virtual jianghu.

So, is there a so-called mainstream school in the real world? There really are. Officially recognized, there are traditions and inheritors of martial arts learning and transmission. The more influential ones are the six famous martial arts sects of Shaolin, Wudang, Emei, Qingcheng, Kunlun and Kongdong. After years of investigation and research by the State General Administration of Sports and the Chinese Wushu Federation, which represent the state and the government, as well as many national surveys of the martial arts, today the martial arts community has come to realize this.

First, the Shaolin School

The Shaolin Temple, which originated as the ancestral home of Zen Buddhism at the foot of Shaorin Mountain in Zhongyue Shaolin Temple, Dengfeng County, Henan Province, was founded in the Northern Wei Dynasty. It has a history of more than 1,500 years and represents a martial art for Buddhist monks. The legend of Shaolin monks calling Shaolin Kung Fu a god stems from Buddhist beliefs and practices. In addition to Songshan Shaolin, there are two other schools, Northern Shaolin and Southern Shaolin. There are three folk tribes: the Fish, the Harbor, and the Hong. There are four sects, Shengda, Luohan, Erlang and Weituo, as well as eighteen Shaolin tribes.

Shaolin Abbot: Shi Yongxin

Shaolin Abbot and Andy Lau and Fan Bingbing

Shi Yongxin, surnamed Liu, was born in Yingcheng, Anhui Province in 1965. He is currently the abbot of Shaolin Temple, the thirtieth abbot of Shaolin Temple, vice president of the Chinese Buddhist Association, president of the Buddhist Association of Henan Province, representative of the Ninth National People's Congress, and a member of the All-China Youth Federation. Martial arts master Shi Xiaolong. He was the first Chinese monk to receive an MBA degree. Shi Yongxin set up the Shaolin Temple Sangha, Shaolin Temple Industrial Development Co. Ltd. and Shaolin Temple Film and Television Co. to run and promote Shaolin Temple commercially, which has sparked controversy.

Two. Wu Tang Nation

From Hubei Shiyan Danjiangkou Wudang Mountain. It represents martial arts within the discipline. Its founder, Zhang Sanfeng, was a Taoist or pseudo Taoist priest from early Yuan to early Ming. The founder of my family is Zhang Songxi, the founder of the Songxi school of Wudang in the middle of the Ming Dynasty, and the history can be verified clearly. Legend has it that there are two tribes and eight tribes in Wudang. There are so many other tribal portals in Wudang that it is difficult to count them all. Since ancient times, there is no teacher in Wudang Mountain, only the Taoist sect.

Master Wu: you Xuan De

Outsiders see the fun, insiders see the doorway. You Xuande, the 14th patriarch of the Tang Dynasty and moderator of the Hall of Supreme Harmony, said that Shaolin, Wudang and Emei have their own strengths in kung fu. Wudang's kung fu is feminine, and Shaolin's kung fu is ferocious. As for the Emei school, it is somewhere in between. "Wudang" master You Xuande even said, now he has practiced two long-lost martial arts: "Dali Duan's one-yang finger" and "Beggar's eighteen palms".

Wudang Kung Fu, disciple of You Xuan De.

Three. Emei

Origin and Sichuan Jiazhou, Meishan County Emei Mountain. Combines Buddhism, Taoism and martial arts. Nowadays, the Emei school's ancestors include Situ Xuankong, the founder of the White Ape in the Warring States, Zen Master Bai Yun of the Southern Song Dynasty, and the elders of the Lin Ji school. This is the Emei three ancestors.

While most of the "Emei Sect" in novels and TV dramas are Taoist, Shi Yongshou, president of the Emei Mountain Buddhist Association, said there have been no nuns at Emei Mountain in nearly 2,000 years of Buddhist history. The current head of the Emei school is 88-year-old monk Tong Yong, the sole heir to the Emei school of Monkeyish Fist. Emei martial arts are between Wudang and Shaolin, small and flexible. In fact, the Emei school of martial arts emphasizes a combination of qigong and martial arts, including acupressure and grabbing and locking arms.

Emei School Head: Master Tong Yong

Four. Qingcheng School

From Mount Qingcheng in Dujiangyan, Sichuan. It is a Taoist martial art with a long history in Emei. The old saying is that it is from the Emei tribe, but Qin

Dao Xinxuan, a national level boxer, a six-dan Chinese Wushu Jinhu, and a member of the World Federation of Traditional Wushu. He has been studying martial arts for more than 20 years and is proficient in one of the Qingcheng Mountain's best techniques, "Cleaving Fist". He is a Chinese Guinness TV Champion. Liu is well versed in the "Splitting Fist" and the eight styles of Qingcheng Taiji.

Principal of Qingcheng School: Liu Suibin

Kunlun School

Originally from the Kunlun Mountains in Qinghai, it belongs to Taoist martial arts. It is said that the twelve disciples of the Buddha in Yuanshi County are the twelve ancestors of the Kunlun Mountain, which is closely related to the myth and not credible. Sichuan was created by the Eastern Jin Dynasty founder Tieling Taoist. This is the Taoist Kunlun school.

Zhou Jinsheng was born in a martial arts family. He practiced martial arts with his father since childhood and later studied under martial arts master Liang. His favorite was a famous master in Inner Mongolia. Chaos taught Liang the authentic Palace Bagua Palm and Wudang Taiji Swordsmanship, and Zhou Jinsheng received the true tradition from his master. Later, after a lifetime of hard work, he created the Kunlun Dry Palm. Over time, Mr. Zhou Jinsheng paid attention to collecting various stunts of Kunlun Wushu and gradually realized the true meaning of the martial art. He said, "It can't represent the art, great power is great, small power is great, great power is art, art can't represent the Tao, the Tao is the highest realm, it can't win power."

Qinghai Kunlun School Principal: Zhou Jinsheng

Six. Hong Kong High School

From the Kongdong Mountains in Pingliang, Gansu. It is a martial art of the Taoist sect, claimed to have circulated in the late Tang Dynasty. Legend has it that Fei Hongzi, the originator of chivalry, studied at Shaolin Temple in his early years, and then entered the door, practiced martial arts in the Kongdong Mountains, and founded the Kongdong School, also known as the Kongdong School of Chivalry.

Also known as Hua Wuying, he was born in Tokyo. Father was a diplomat. Studied high school and college in Australia, Germany and Austria. After graduating from the Austrian University in Austria, he traveled throughout the Middle East, Near East and Southeast Asia before returning to Japan to work as a German translator and tour guide.

Principal of Kongdong School: Hua Wuying