The Origins of
Tai Chi
Author:
Stephen Todd
The principles of
Tai Chi were established by Taoist hermits and evolved as a martial
fighting art called Tai Chi Chuan.
The early Tai Chi
teachers were mystical figures however; the exception was Chang San-Feng,
who was the first major figure in Tai Chi history.
The Ming Dynasty
places his date of birth at 1247 and he is credited with being the
founder of the fighting art called Wudang
Kung
fu.
He is believed to
have studied under a Taoist recluse living in the mountains of
Northwest China; he then studied at a Shaolin temple.
The Shaolin
temple is credited as the originator of fighting
martial arts such as Shaolin temple
boxing and Kung Fu.
After watching a
fight between a bird and a snake, Chang was impressed by the ability
of the snake to dodge and counter attack the larger crane.
Chang observed
this ability to defend and counter attack and then modified his Kung
Fu fighting technique.
From this point
on the soft or internal Chinese marshal arts were born including: Ba
Gua, Hsingi and Tai Chi Chan.
Chen Style The
17th century in China was a time of war and Tai Chi was developed as
a fighting discipline. The most famous of these was the Chen style
of Tai Chi founded by Chen Wang T'ing who served under general Chi
Chi-Guang.
General Chi Chi-Guang
is credited with writing the "classic of Kung Fu" which, set out the
principles of what has now become the Cheng style of Tai Chi.
T'ing is credited
as being the first person to refer to Tai Chi Chuan rather than
Wudang kung fu.
Yang Style Yang
Lu-Chan found work in the household of Chen Chang-xing and secretly
spied on Tai Chi Sessions of his master.
One day he
offered to fight a stranger in front of Chen, who was unaware of his
fighting skills.
Chen was so
impressed by his performance that he accepted Yang as a student,
Yang then travelled throughout China as Chen's representative and in
any fights he took part in legend has it he was never beaten.
Yang adapted the
Chen style to be a gentler version of Tai Chi. Today, Chen is
acknowledged as the oldest of the three Tai Chi styles but it is
Yang's style is more popular.
Wu Yu Hsiang
Style The third major style of Tai Chi was developed by Wu Yu-Hsiang,
who studied with Yang and Chen.
His style
incorporates features of both styles and these three styles form the
base from which many other styles have flourished.
Modern
Developments The government in Peking in 1949 established the Wushu
Council to formulate a style that would popularise Tai Chi, improve
people's health and make it a competitive
sport.
The Wushu style
is responsible for popularising Tai Chi and bringing it to a greater
audience than ever before.
A new style
called the Beijing 24 step form came from this research and has
become popular worldwide.
The most famous
of the Tai Chi masters of the 20th century was Chen Man-Ching; he
simplified the Yang style big form of 108 postures cutting it to
just 37.
This style is
easier to learn and established Chan Man Ching as the most
influential Tai Chi master of the 20th Century.
Article
Source:
www.ArticlesBase.com