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The history of Tai Chi Chuan There exists a very ancient
history in China of a system of movements that are associated with health and
philosophy. In some sense one can see all of these as contributing to the
climate in which Tai Chi was born. From the very origins of Taoism
in the sixth century BC, sages like Lao Tsu wrote in the Tao Te Ching:
In this and in the entire tenor of his writings Lao Tsu reflects
the central philosophical underpinnings of Tai Chi Chuan. Later, in the period of the
Three Kingdoms (220 to 265 AD) there was a physician Hua-tu'o who relied not
only on medicine but also taught the 'movements of the five creatures' snake,
tiger, crane, dragon, monkey - a system he called Wu-chi chih hsi. He
believed that the body needed to be regularly exercised to help with
digestion and circulation and only by doing so could a long and healthy live
be achieved. He advocated a system of imitating the movements of these
animals to help exercise every joint in the body. His teaching, and its
connection with the movements of animals, is probably the earliest precursor
of Tai Chi. In the sixth century A.D.
Bodihdharma came to the Shao-Lin Monastery and seeing that the monks there
were in poor physical condition from too much meditation and not enough
movement, taught them his Eighteen Form Lohan Exercise. Over time these grew
to be the precursors of the Wei Chia (outer-extrinsic) school of exercise, by
which is meant all the schools of martial art forms which take an 'external'
approach. This is in contrast to the Nei Chia (internal-intrinsic) school of
which Tai Chi is a member, that take a fundamentally 'internal' approach. In
the eighth century AD (the Tang dynasty) philosophers like Hsu Hsuan- p'ing
developed a 'Long Fist' of 37 forms. Of these certain ones such as: Play the
Pi'pa, Single Whip, Step up to Seven Stars, Jade Lady Works the Shuttles,
High Pat on Horse, and White Crane Cools Wing, still survive in the
contemporary Tai Chi form. There were several other such forms being
practiced in the eighth century (Heavenly-inborn Style and Nine Small Heavens
Style) from which grew the origins of Tai Chi. Chang San-feng. The eight 'postures' are: His exercises stressed
suppleness and elasticity and were opposed to hardness and force. They
incorporated philosophy, physiology, psychology, geometry and the laws of
dynamics. His theories, writings and practices were elaborated sometime later
by Wang Chung-yueh and his student Chiang Fa. Wang apparently took the
thirteen postures of Chang San-feng and linked them together into continuous
sequences, thus creating something which resembles the contemporary Tai Chi
Chuan form. His student Chiang Fa taught Tai Chi to the villagers of a town
on Honan (almost all of whom were called Chen) and thus began the first
family school of Tai Chi Chuan.
These are the principal styles
of Tai Chi that are in existence in the present day. |