Fanzi Quan or tumbling Chuan is also known as
Bashanfan (eight-flash Chuan). It is so called because of its eight major
flashing movements, which are executed as fast as lightning and thunderclaps.
The movements in tumbling Chuan are varied and continuous.
The Fanzi
Quan ballad says: "Wu Mu has passed down the Fanzi Quan which has mystery in its
straightforward movements." Wu Mu is the other name for Yue Fei, a famous
general of the Southern Song Dynasty. Some people have taken this to mean that
Fanzi Quan was created by Yue Fei, but no historical record has verified this.
Earlier mentions of Fanzi Quan appeared in A New Essay on Wushu Arts
written by anti-Japanese general Qi Jiguang of the Ming Dynasty. In Volume XTV
of Quan Jing (Chuan Text), it says: "Throughout the history of fist fights,
there have been the 32-form Chang Quan of Emperor Taizu of the Song Dynasty,
Liubu Quan (six-step Chuan), Hou Quan (monkey-imitating Chuan), E'quan Chuan,
etc. Though their names are different, the routines are roughly the same. As for
today's 72-move Wen-family Chuan, 36-move locking fist fight, 24-move
reconnoitre Chuan, eight-flash Chuan and 12-move short style Chuan, they are
among the best styles."
exactly tumbling Chuan of today. Bashanfan was
the old name used in the Ming Dynasty. From Qi's account, it is evident that
Bashanfan was already a comparatively complete and perfect style of fist fight
in the Ming Dynasty. Fanzi Quan centers on the Bashanfan (eight-flash moves)
while others are merely derivatives of this.
During the Qing Dynasty,
Fanzi Quan was popular in north China, especially in Raoyang, Lixian and
Gao-yang areas in Hebei Province. During the reigns of Qing emperors Xianfeng
and Tongzhi (1851-1874), a recluse called Zhao Canyi lived at Raoyang in Hebei.
Zhao was not only proficient at Fanzi Quan but was also well known for his
master/ of Chuojiao Quan (feet-poking Chuan). He taught the Chuan arts to Duan
and Wang families respectively. The brothers of Duan Zhixu and Duan Zhiyong
learned Chuojiao while Wang Laozi and Wang Zhan'ao studied Fanzi Quan. Later on,
the two families taught each other and exchanged their knowledge. Fanzi Quan
stresses the use of hands, whereas Chuojiao emphasizes the use of feet. Modern
Fanzi Quan experts often practise feet-poking skills as well.
Fanzi Quan
spread far and wide after it was introduced into Hebei, developing many branch
styles. The eagle-claw tumbling Chuan was evolved on the basis of a combination
of the eagle-claw moving Chuan, eagle-claw running Chuan and tumbling Chuan.
When hitting, the hand is in the form of clenched fist. When retrieving, it is
in the form of an eagle claw. Fist jabbing can be as fast as the swing of a whip
and as relentless as teeming rain. Another combination is Digong Quan (ground
stroke Chuan) and Fanzi Quan tumbling Chuan, called Digong Fanzi Quan (ground
stroke tumbling Chuan). It absorbs both the tumbling Chuan tricks of fastness
and variation and the ground stroke Chuan moves of falling, pouncing, wrestling
and leg locking. Because there are some feet-poking tricks in the ground stroke
tumbling Chuan, it is also called by some the feet-poking tumbling Chuan. Other
combinations include Shaolin tumbling Chuan, long-style tumbling Chuan,
short-style tumbling Chuan, Yanqing-style tumbling Chuan and soft palming
tumbling Chuan. (see picture)
Contemporary Fanzi Quan master Yu Boqian
not only inherited the tumbling techniques from his predecessors but also
improved it by programming two new routines of wave-poking tumbling Chuan and
back-rolling tumbling Chuan.
Fanzi Quan stresses the combination of
external and internal strengths and energies. Exercises involving the
circulation of air flows inside the body are carried through the water conduit,
blood vessels and network of sinews which Chinese medicine believes exist in
human bodies. These three networks and channels merge under the guidance of the
mind. Tumbling boxers take root in their legs while emphasizing hand tricks and
movements. The tumbling exercises are divided into two classes of major moves
and minor moves. The major moves include jabbing, axing, elbowing, jamming,
wrestling, rubbing and holding. The minor moves are rolling, lifting, turning,
penetrating, slipping, hammering, provoking and flicking. In tumbling Chuan, the
routine is made rhythmic by slow and fast movements, continuous and intermittent
actions. Tumbling boxers prefer to fight in a straightforward way. They change
freely from hardness to softness and vice versa. When the hand hits out, the
foot follows with a quick step. The body clutches together while moving around
fast. The fist never hits out aimlessly nor does the hand retreat without trying
to attack on its way back.
The routine of tumbling Chuan is short and terse.
Its movements are agile and quick and arranged in compact patterns. While
practising, the footwork is steady, posture upright and square, and actions are
versatile. One moment the two fists hit straight and the next they are rounded
for their attacks. Various tricks and moves are like whirl-winds and the entire
routine is completed as if in one breath. The fist hits of tumbling Chuan are
described "as dense as rain drops and as fast as a burn-ing string of small
firecrackers." The tumbling Chuan stresses crisp, fast, hard and resilient
movements.
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