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  2. Styles of Chinese martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Styles_of_Chinese_martial_arts

    The group of Northern martial arts includes many illustrious styles such as Northern Shaolin Kung Fu, Baguazhang, Bajiquan, Chaquan, Chuojiao, Eagle Claw, Northern Praying Mantis and tai chi. Changquan is often identified as the representative Northern style and forms a separate division in modern Wushu curriculum.

  3. Shaolin Kempo Karate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaolin_Kempo_Karate

    Shaolin Kenpo Karate (or SKK) is a martial art style that combines the Five Animals of Shaolin Kung Fu (Shaolinquan), the core competency of Kenpo, the hard-hitting linear explosiveness of traditional Karate, as well as the power of Western boxing and the felling and grappling arts of Jujutsu, Chin Na, and Mongolian wrestling. [1]

  4. Shaolin kung fu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaolin_kung_fu

    Shaolin kung fu teaches all these types of techniques. In kung fu, techniques are taught via two-person practices. In these practices, one party attacks and the other defends or counters or stands in posture for the other party to perform the technique. In Shaolin kung fu, in addition, two-person forms are taught.

  5. Chinese martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_martial_arts

    Chinese martial arts are an integral element of 20th-century Chinese popular culture. [28] Wuxia or "martial arts fiction" is a popular genre that emerged in the early 20th century and peaked in popularity during the 1960s to 1980s. Wuxia films were produced from the 1920s. The Kuomintang suppressed wuxia, accusing it of promoting superstition ...

  6. List of Chinese martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_martial_arts

    Bak Fu Pai ("White Tiger Kung Fu") [8] Tiger Kung Fu / Shadong-style Tiger [9] Bak Hok Pai ("Tibetian White Crane") [10] Hop Ga Kuen [10] Bak Mei Kung Fu ("white eyebrow") [8] [7] Baoquan (Leopard fist) [6] Bei Tui ("Northern Legs") [11] Black Crane Kung Fu [12] Changquan ("long boxing") [12] [13] Chaquan [12] [14] Chin Na; Choy Gar [15] [16 ...

  7. Karate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karate

    By the 1970s, martial arts films (especially kung fu films and Bruce Lee flicks from Hong Kong) had formed a mainstream genre and launched the "kung fu craze" which propelled karate and other Asian martial arts into mass popularity.

  8. Byakuren Kaikan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byakuren_Kaikan

    Despite being classified as a Karate school its origins date actually back to the Shorinji Kempo, a martial art considered to be derived from Shaolin Kung Fu.Henceforth, Byakuren Kaikan, much like its parent, divides the techniques into two main categories: Gōhō (剛法 - i.e. "hard techniques": punches, kicks, etc.) and Jūhō (柔法 - "soft techniques": throws, joint locks, etc.).

  9. Kung fu (term) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kung_fu_(term)

    It is only in the late twentieth century that this term was used in relation to Chinese martial arts by the Chinese community. [2] The Oxford English Dictionary defines the term "kung-fu" as "a primarily unarmed Chinese martial art resembling karate" and attributes the first use of "kung fu" in print to Punch magazine in 1966. [3]