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Drunken Boxing

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  • 2008-04-11 13:53:53
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Heavy-sword Martial Art of the Hui Minority

Heavy-sword Martial Art of the Hui Minority
Heavy-sword Martial Art of the Hui Minority is a sort of martial art popular in Beijing and...

Taiji Quan (Shadow Boxing)

Taiji Quan (Shadow Boxing)
Taiji Quan (Shadow Boxing), which can be used to self-defense and improve the corporeity and...

Shaolin Weapons

Shaolin Weapons
There are a great variety of Shaolin waepons. At present, spears, swords, cudgels, broadswords,...

Drunken Boxing is a style of boxing that imitates a drunkard in its movements, involving both offensive and defensive skills. The striking features of the boxing are its fast speed and unpredictable changes in beating the opponent. It is also known for its unique appreciating, health-boosting and practical values.   

The postures of Drunken Boxing are pretty much like the staggering movements of a drunkard, but the boxing is actually well choreographed with no drunkenness at all. It is a routine of martial art skills involving stringent arm, leg and body movements.

It is said that Drunken Boxing was derived from the fighting skills used by Wu Song, one of the characters in the novel Outlaws of the Marsh, when he beat a hooligan surnamed Jiang after getting drunk, as well as the attacking skills used by Lu Zhishen, also a character in the novel, when he caused an uproar in the mountain as he was drunk. The movements of Drunken Boxing are guided by the principle of "drunken in appearance but not in spirit".

The major postures include beating, pushing, throwing, rolling, leaping and jumping. While retaining the beauty of body art, all the postures are practical fighting skills.

The boxing has a fairly high requirement on the practitioner in terms of the person’s flexibility in the waist, legs and joints as well as the functions of internal organs, willpower and moral integrity etc. In addition, the performance of the boxing is supposed to give a straight, light and graceful feel.

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Details

  • Drunken Wu Song Beating Jiang the Gate Guard Giant
    Drunken Wu Song Beating Jiang the Gate Guard Giant
    Drunken Wu Song Beating Jiang the Gate Guard Giant
    This is a story in Outlaws of the Marsh - one of the great classical works of Chinese literature. Wu Song was exiled to Mengzhou. On his way there, he learnt that the restaurant owned by Shi En,...
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    Drunken Lu Zhishen Putting Mount Wutai in an Uproar
    Drunken Lu Zhishen Putting Mount Wutai in an Uproar
    This is also a story in the classical novel - Outlaws of the Marsh. Previously named Lu Da, Lu Zhishen was a person with a violent temper, who would fight for justice out of indignation. Once, a...
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