{"id":10902,"date":"2019-11-20T00:18:04","date_gmt":"2019-11-20T00:18:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/chinese-culture\/chinese-kung-fu-zhong-guo-gong-fu-wing-chun-legends-and-lineages\/"},"modified":"2019-11-20T00:18:04","modified_gmt":"2019-11-20T00:18:04","slug":"chinese-kung-fu-zhong-guo-gong-fu-wing-chun-legends-and-lineages","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/chinese-kung-fu-zhong-guo-gong-fu-wing-chun-legends-and-lineages\/","title":{"rendered":"Chinese Kung Fu \u4e2d\u56fd\u529f\u592b &#8211;  Wing Chun Legends and Lineages"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<h2><strong>The Snake and the Crane Legend<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p>The origin of  Wing Chun is explained by a legend that involves a fight between a  snake and a crane. According to the legend, a female Kung Fu master, Ng  Mui, who was associated with with the Shaolin Temple*(1), chanced upon a  fight between a snake and a crane, where normally the snake would be  considered the underdog, yet the snake, biding its time and taking  measure of the crane and the crane&#8217;s method of striking &ndash; and taking  care not to be struck by the crane, of course, since, were the crane to  connect (literal sense!) with the snake, it would be curtain time for  the snake! &ndash; itself struck at the propitious moment, killing the crane.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 10px;\">*(1)  Some insist that the temple in question was the renowned Shaolin  Monastery in the town of Dengfeng, Henan Province (which is indeed  famous today for Kung Fu Wushu, including Wing Chun), but, according to  the legend at hand, the monastery in question was deliberately burned by  the Qing government, which saw in Shaolin Monastery a hotbed for  Southern Ming (CE 1644-62) Dynasty sympathizers who were using the  monastery as a base of sorts against the Qing govenment, but since the  Shaolin Monastery in Henan Province was quite likely never burned in the  period in question, it has been suggested by others that the Shaolin  Temple in question was a different temple altogether, one that was  located in Fujian Province, which would also better fit with the Wing  Chun references to &quot;Southern Shaolin Temple&quot;, unless the &quot;Southern&quot; in  question is to be taken to mean the Southern Ming Dynasty (Henan  Province cannot be said to belong to &quot;Southern&quot; China  , and the town of Dengfeng lies near the capital, Zhengzhou, which lies  in the north of the province). Quite confusing, but perhaps  deliberately so!&nbsp;<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Shaolin Monastery in the town of Dengfeng  was burned by a warlord in 1928 during the early years of the Republic  of China (1912-49), where various parts of the republic were under the  rule of local warlords. However, it is alleged, though not documented,  that Shaolin Monstery near Dengfeng, Henan Province was burned by a  rebel leader, Li Zicheng, in 1641, as part of one of many such factual  rebellions &ndash; most of them having their origin in floods or famines &ndash;  against what was seen as an increasingly inept, corrupt and callous Ming  government which, though it provided little in the way of services for  its citizens, was not shy about imposing burdensome levies and taxes  upon them, levies and taxes that hit the poor hardest and which  therefore inspired popular rebellions among peasants in particular  (indeed, the gates to Beijing were willingly opened to the invading Qing  forces by disgruntled peasants who had had enough of the excesses of  the Ming government).<\/p>\n<p>It is perhaps this alleged 1641 burning of  Shaolin Temple, which, as indicated, is quite likely more fiction than  fact, that later evolved into a tale about the burning of Shaolin Temple  either in 1674 (one version of the tale involving the Qing government)  or in 1732 (the other version of the same tale). It would not be the  first time that one feather, thanks to fanciful embellishment, became  five hens, as it were! (The reference is of course to the tale by the  Danish author, Hans Christian Andersen (1805-75).)<\/p>\n<p>This David  versus Goliath duel so inspired Ng Mui that she developed a special  style of Shaolin Kung Fu modelled after the notion of a physically  disadvantaged fighter pitted against a fighter of superior physical  strength, but where the disadvantaged fighter uses his own strengths to  best advantage while taking advantage of the weaknesses inherent in the  opponent&#8217;s manner of fighting. The result of this adaptation of Kung Fu  Wushu to the snake-and-crane duel would later be called Wing Chun, after  a village maiden by this name, which begs the question, <em>Who is Yim Wing Chun?<\/em><\/p>\n<p>There  are even more legends about Yim Wing Chun and her involvement in the  Shaolin Kung Fu style bearing her name than there are legends about the  burning of Shaolin Temple!&nbsp; The two main legends about Yim Wing Chun and  her involvement in the branch of Shaolin Kung Fu that would be named  after her are legends with a so-called lineage, i.e., once hatched, they  acquired followers\/ devotees who perpetuated the story and who, in some  cases, are claimed to have been descendants of the principals in the  original tale (whether myth or reality) and who further developed the  discipline in different directions, sometimes with the emergence of  sub-lineages that developed the discipline in even more nuanced  directions. The two main lineages of Wing Chun legends are as follows:<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3><strong>The Yip Man Wing Chun Legend Lineage<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Having  escaped from the Southern Shaolin Monastery (the one that is alleged to  have existed in Fujian Province) in the nick of time, i.e., just before  it was destroyed by Qing forces near the end of the 17<sup>th<\/sup>  century, Ng Mui made a beeline for the jungle area of southwestern  China, namely, the Yunnan-Sichuan Province area that was not very firmly  under the control of the Qing government (the last vestiges of the  Southern Ming had also fled to the same area&#8230; curiously, the  Kuomintang, or the Nationalist forces of Chiang Kai-Shek, would, some  two centuries later, flee to Chengdu in Sichuan Province where they  would make their last stand before escaping to the island of Formosa,  aka Taiwan, where the Kuomintang would establish itself as a rebel  government, though the government of the PRC would continue to view  Formosa\/ Taiwan as a province of mainland China).<\/p>\n<p>It was here, in  the jungle-like area of Yunnan-Sichuan Province &ndash; in particular, in the  Daliang Mountains &ndash; that Ng Mui observed the unequal duel between the  snake and the crane that would so profoundly influence her thinking  about Shaolin Kung Fu. Even larger-than-life Kung Fu masters are no  larger than life than that they have to eat, and Ng Mui, it turns out,  was fond of bean curd, or tofu, which she would buy from the local tofu  shop, owned and operated by a certain Yim Yee.<\/p>\n<p>Yim Yee had a very  pretty daughter, who, for some inexplicable reason, refused an offer of  marriage from the local warlord. Tofu dealers were pretty poor; at best,  they eked out a subsitence living, while a warlord was, by comparison,  as wealthy as a governor! But perhaps this particular warlord was  sinfully ugly, or maybe just very old. The legend, though it does dwell  on details as mundane as Ng Mui&#8217;s fondness for tofu, doesn&#8217;t dwell on  the more relevant detail of what could possibly have been behind the  refusal of the daughter of a simple shopkeeper to marry a man who was as  wealthy as a governor!<\/p>\n<p>The tofu merchant&#8217;s daughter, Yim Wing  Chun, knew that the warlord was not likely to take no for an answer, and  was therefore understandably distraught, since she did not care to wed  the warlord, yet saw no way out. Fortunately, Ng Mui got wind of the  affair and suggested to the tofu merchant&#8217;s daughter that she be the  first to learn the new Shaolin Kung Fu style that Ng Mui had developed  based on her observation of the mismatched duel between the snake and  the crane. Having, one supposes, few options (fleeing would probably  have been the only viable alternative option) Yim Wing Chun accepted the  offer to become Ng Mui&#8217;s apprentice, and a plan wss hatched whereby the  warlord, once Yim Wing Chun was ready, would be challenged to a duel  between himself and the pretty tofu maiden, an offer which the warlord,  when it was eventually made, found ludicrous, but accepted, confident  that the victory over Yim Wing Chun would be a piece of cake &ndash; uh, make  that a piece of tofu!<\/p>\n<p>Well, as we of course know (else the sport  would not have become a rage), the pretty tofu maiden whupped the big  bad warlord and lived happily ever after with her Ng Mui&#8230; just pulling  your leg &ndash; homosexuality was not the stuff of legends in those days  either! Actually, the pretty tofu maiden married the handsome  boy-next-door with whom she had been in love all along (which probably  explains why Yim Wing Chun wasn&#8217;t interested in marrying the big bad  warlord in the first place, rich or not), a certain Leung Bok-Chao, who  also learned Wing Chun, which is the name that was given to the new  Shaolin Kung Fu discipline developed by Ng Mui in honor of the pretty  tofu maiden (you&#8217;ll have to see the 1994 Hong Kong Wushu movie, <em>Wing Chun<\/em>,  starring Michelle Yeoh, to learn about Leung Bok-Chao&#8217;s profession  before he too became a Wing Chun master alongside his pretty tofu maiden  of a wife, since the English-language version of the legend provides  few details about Leung Bok-Chao, other than the fact that he was Yim  Wing Chun&#8217;s beau and that he too learned the art &amp; science of Wing  Chun).<\/p>\n<p>Wing Chun was accordingly passed on from master to disciple  down through the ages, one of the most famous disciples cum masters in  recent times being Bruce Lee, the Chinese-American Hong Kong martial  arts actor who went on to transcend, as it were, Wing Chun in favor of  what he felt was a better, less structured martial arts discipline that  he called <em>Jeet Kune Do<\/em> (&quot;The Way of the Intercepting Fist&quot;).  Bruce Lee&#8217;s teacher was Yip Man, in case you were wondering about the  connection between this particular legend lineage and Yip Man, who name  is sometimes written as Ip Man. Ng Mui would probably have approved of  Bruce Lee&#8217;s later heterodoxy, given that she herself had been open to  new ways of thinking about Shaolin Kung Fu when she arrived in the  Daliang Mountains and observed a certain mismatched duel ending in an  unorthodox outcome.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3><strong>The Yiu Kai Wing Chun Legend Lineage<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>The Yiu Kai lineage of the Wing Chun legend is anchored, time-wise, in the early 19<sup>th<\/sup>  century, i.e., about a century later than the Yip Man Wing Chun legend.  According to the Yiu Kai Wing Chun legend, Wing Chun was the daughter  of Yim Sei, a Shaolin Kung Fu master also at the &quot;Southern&quot; Shaolin  Temple in Fujian Province, an alleged temple whose actual existence has  yet to be established. As in the Yip\/ Ip Man Wing Chun legend, the  temple was attacked and burned by Qing forces, and similarly, Yim Sei  and his daughter, Wing Chun, escaped in the nick of time, then plotted,  not a course for the Yunnan-Sichuan Province area, but a course for  Guangxi Province (Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region), sandwiched in  between Yunnan Province to the west and Guangdong Province to the east,  the latter of which is a coastal province, near whose southern  (southwestern, actually) extremity lies Hainan Island (and Province)&#8230;  and note that <em>xi<\/em> means &quot;west&quot; and <em>dong<\/em> means &quot;east&quot;, while <em>guang<\/em> means &quot;vast expanse&quot;; therefore, Guangxi and Guangdong translate to &quot;Western Expanse&quot; and &quot;Eastern Expanse&quot;, respectively.<\/p>\n<p>Also  as in the Yip\/ Ip Man legend, Yim Sei ran across a duel between a snake  and a crane, which the snake, against all odds, won and which greatly  impressed Yim Sei &ndash; so much so, in fact, that he worked out a special  new Shaolin Kung Fu discipline with his daughter, Yim Wing Chun, which  the father of course named after his daughter. Unlike in the Yip\/ Ip Man  legend, there is no warlord suitor who asked for the hand of Yim Wing  Chun, though the latter did indeed marry a childhood sweetheart, a  disciple to her father, namely, Leung Bok-Chao. The young couple became  good at the new sport and moved eastward to Guangdong Province where  they opened a martial arts school in the city of Zhaoqing in 1815,  teaching &ndash; what else?! &ndash; Wing Chun!<\/p>\n<p>Oddly, we never learn what  exactly is the connection of Yiu Kai to Yim Sei and his daughter, Yim  Wing Chun (this in contrast to Yip Man&#8217;s connection to the Wing Chun  lineage bearing his name and which produced Bruce Lee, i.e., with Yip  Man as Bruce Lee&#8217;s teacher). Perhaps Yiu Kai was a later master who  played an important role in the perpetuation of Wing Chun after the  demise of Leung Bok-Chao and Yim Wing Chun (think: an essential link  between the distant and the recent past). Not even the official flow  chart (borrowed without permission from Wikipedia) depicting the main  lineages of the Wing Chun legend (see below) list Yiu Kai. Hmm, well,  absent the facts, one can only speculate &ndash; which I neatly leave to you,  the reader, to sort out!<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">&nbsp;<img decoding=\"async\" width=\"500\" border=\"0\" style=\"display: inline;\" src=\"http:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/11\/20191122_5dd77cd551c16.jpg\" alt=\"Chinese Kung Fu \u4e2d\u56fd\u529f\u592b -  Wing Chun Legends and Lineages\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">Fig 2: Main lineages of Wing Chun Kung Fu<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>An Epilogue (to All of the Wing Chun Legends)<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>There  are a multitude of variations on these two legends, which might suggest  that the tale at the heart of the story is pretty much myth, which is  the usual conclusion in such situations. And in a sense, it doesn&#8217;t  really matter much whether the legend is more fiction than fact; what  matters is the merit of the discipline itself, though it certainly  increases the allure of a system of martial arts if it claims to be able  to teach a runt how to better a giant, or claims to be able to teach a  mere wisp of a girl how to better a hulk of a man!&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>However, an  alternative, somewhat foolproof *(2) notion was put forth to explain the  plethora of variations on the Wing Chun legend, namely, that it was  done to confuse the enemy, the enemy being the various Qing governments;  if no one could determine who was the actual originator of the  discipline, then it would be harder to root it out, and though this  seems, on the face of it, a bit silly, some people seem to have an  obstinate penchant for believing in myths &ndash; and often the more  far-fetched, the better!<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 10px;\">*(2) That  is, &quot;foolproof&quot; as in non-falsifiable, or possessing the property of  being definitionally insulated from the scientific requirement of  Falsifiability (refutability) as put forward by Karl Popper&#8230; note that  the pronouncements of an ayatollah or a pope are definitionally  insulated from Falsifiability.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Other potential sources for  the origin of Wing Shun have been suggested besides that of the  anti-Qing, Shaolin Monastery origin, though I note that the Shaolin  Monastery of Henan Province remains to this day the main seat of Kung Fu  Wushu in China. Two such suggested alternative sources are the infamous  Triads, who would have had all the motivation one could have desired  for being able to disarm an opponent at close quarters without  attracting the kind of attention that a gunshot would produce*(3), and  the Hakka people of southern China, who are known for their Hakka Kuen  system of martial arts that is also closely related to the Fujian  (Province) system of martial arts (some of the first non-Bai Yue folk to  inhabit the southern regions of China were the Hakka, and living as  solitary groups among the native Bai Yue, they may have had good reason  to learn martial arts &ndash; indeed, I seem to recall that these Hakka built  not just villages in the south of China (which, at the time, was in fact  south <em>of <\/em>China), but fortresses, i.e., they surrounded their  villages with high walls that were built as defensive works capable of  repelling invaders and other unwelcome visitors, including, perhaps, the  locals).<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 10px;\">*(3) Note that one of the  justification theories for the development of Wing Chun rests precisely  on the notion of being able to overpower an opponent at close quarters  where one might simply have been <em>detained<\/em> by a member of law  enforcement rather than having been killed on the spot (assuming that  one wasn&#8217;t armed, or at least not visibly so). That is, following the  assumption that Wing Chun was designed as a weapon against Qing Dynasty  authorities, it was felt that if one was merely detained by a policeman  (the 17<sup>th<\/sup> to 19<sup>th<\/sup> century version of a policeman,  that is) for appearing &quot;suspicious&quot;, then a technique that would enable  the anti-Qing Wing Chun Kung Fu fighter to make short shrift of the  policeman in question, even with one&#8217;s bare hands only, was very  valuable indeed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 10px;\">However,  the same inconspicuous, short shrift qualities that would endear Wing  Chun to an anti-Qing revolutionary movement would quite naturally appeal  equally as much to a 20<sup>th<\/sup> century drugs, prostitution and racketeering ring such as those of the Triads.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"chine-tie-zi-nei-rong-zhi-hou\" id=\"chine-4035647534\"><script async src=\"\/\/pagead2.googlesyndication.com\/pagead\/js\/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-1889418300638825\" crossorigin=\"anonymous\"><\/script><ins class=\"adsbygoogle\" style=\"display:block;\" data-ad-client=\"ca-pub-1889418300638825\" \ndata-ad-slot=\"7273022922\" \ndata-ad-layout-key=\"-gw-3+1f-3d+2z\"\ndata-ad-format=\"fluid\"><\/ins>\n<script> \n(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); \n<\/script>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The origin of  Wing Chun is explained by a legend that involves a fight between a  snake and a crane. According to the legend, a female Kung Fu master, Ng  Mui, who was associated with with the Shaolin Temple*(1), chanced upon a  fight between a snake and a crane, where normally the snake would be  considered the underdog, yet the snake, biding its time and taking  measure of the crane and the crane&#8217;s method of striking &ndash; and taking  care not to be struck by the crane, of course, since, were the crane to  connect (literal sense!) with the snake, it would be curtain time for  the snake! &ndash; itself struck at the propitious moment, killing the crane.<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[9,2858],"tags":[121,1021,45,1157],"class_list":["post-10902","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-chinese-culture","category-chinese-kung-fu","tag-chinese-kung-fu","tag-teacher","tag-teaching","tag-to-teach"],"views":182,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10902","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=10902"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10902\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=10902"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=10902"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/chinesemoment.com\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=10902"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}