Liuhebafa

Note: The art is commonly abbreviated as LHBF, and often referred to by its Cantonese name: Lok Hap Baat Faat

Liu He Ba Fa Chuan
六 合 八 法 拳
Six Harmonies Eight Methods Boxing

Chen Tuan / Chen Xi Yi

Chen Tuan / Chen Xi Yi
Also known as Shuǐ Quán, 水拳, Xinyi Liuhebafa, 心意六合八法拳
Focus Striking, weapons training, Qigong
Country of origin China China
Creator Chén Tuán 陳摶, also known as Chén Xīyí 陳希夷
Famous practitioners Da Yuan
Li Chan
Chen Guangdi
Chen Helu
Yan Guoxing
Wu Yihui
Parenthood Wudang Kung Fu
Olympic sport No

Liuhebafachuan 六合八法拳; Pinyin: liùhébāfǎquán) (literally Six Harmonies Eight Methods Boxing) is a form of internal Chinese martial arts. It has been called "Xinyi Liuhebafa-" 心意六合八法拳 and is also referred to as "Water Boxing" (shuǐ quán 水拳) due to its principles.

History

The Song Dynasty Taoist sage Chen Tuan (Chén Tuán 陳摶, also known as Chén Xīyí 陳希夷 or by his nickname, Chen Po) is often credited with its origin and development.[1] He was associated with the Hua Shan Taoist Monastery on Mount Hua in Shaanxi Province.[2]

The Liuhebafa form "Zhú Jī 築基" was taught in the late 1930s in Shanghai and Nanjing by Wu Yihui (1887–1958).[3] It is said he had learned the art from three teachers: Yan Guoxing, Chen Guangdi (who learned the art from a monk, Da Yuan and a Taoist, Li Chan), and Chen Helu.[4]

Many of Wu Yihui's students had martial arts backgrounds and modified the form to merge it with their own knowledge. This is one of several explanations for its similarities with other martial arts such as Xingyiquan, Baguazhang, T'ai chi and Yiquan.

Six Harmonies and Eight Methods

The Six Harmonies and the Eight Methods are the guiding principles of Liuhebafa that give it its name.

Six Harmonies, 六合

  1. 體合於心 (Pinyin: tǐ hé yū xīn) Body and Mind Combine
  2. 心合於意 (xīn hé yū yì) Mind and Intent Combine
  3. 意合於氣 (yì hé yū qì) Intent and Chi Combine
  4. 氣合於神 (qì hé yū shén) Chi and Spirit Combine
  5. 神合於動 (shén hé yū dòng) Spirit and Movement Combine
  6. 動合於空 (dòng hé yū kōng) Movement and Emptiness Combine

Eight Methods, 八法

  1. 氣 (qì) Chi
  2. 骨 (gǔ) Bone
  3. 形 (xíng) Shape
  4. 隨 (suí) Follow
  5. 提 (tí) Rise
  6. 還 (huán) Return
  7. 勒 (lè) Retain
  8. 伏 (fú) Conceal

Forms

Wu Yi Hui performing Liuhebafa

The system of Liuhebafa, called Huayue Xiyi Men, as taught by Wu Yi Hui contains several forms (套路 taòlù), including bare hand and weapons forms as well as Qigong methods.[5]

Hand forms

Weapon forms

Internal exercises

See also

References

  1. Glenn D. Newth (2006). Hwa Yu Tai Chi Ch'uan: Unlocking the Mysteries of the Five-Word Song. Blue Snake Books. ISBN 1-5839-4161-4.
  2. Hua Ching Ni (1992). Life and Teaching of Two Immortals: Chen Tuan. Shrine of the Eternal Breath of Tao, College of Tao & Traditional Chinese Healing. ISBN 0-9370-6448-3.
  3. "History: Origins, Nanjing, and Others". WaterSpirit-6x8. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
  4. Jess O'Brien (2007). Nei Jia Quan: Internal Martial Arts. Blue Snake Books. ISBN 1-5839-4199-1.
  5. "Curriculum". International Liuhebafa Internal Arts Association. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.