HOME

Scenery
  • Natural Scenery
  • Historic Sites
  • Nature Reserves
  • City Guide
  • Cultural Travel
Traditions
  • Myths and Legends
  • Festivals and Customs
  • Clothing and Ornaments
  • Folk Handicraft
  • Folk Art
  • Folk Residences
  • Ethnic Minority
Kaleidoscope
  • Medicine and Healthcare
  • Food Culture
  • Chinese Kungfu
  • Science and Invention
  • Games
  • Ming and Qing Furniture
  • Traditional Trades
Arts
  • Calligraphy and Painting
  • Sculpture
  • Architecture
  • Opera
  • Music and Dance
  • Artwork
History
  • Historical Figures
  • Historical Events
  • Archeology
  • Classics
  • Anecdotes
  • Literature
  • Humanistic Spirit
  • Antique Appreciation
  • Learn Chinese Characters
  • Q & A on Traditions
  • China Overview
  • Feature
  • E-book
  • Appreciation of Poems
  • Greeting Card
  • WallPaper

Kaleidoscope -> Chinese Kungfu

Drunken Boxing

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

  • ADD TO FAVORITE
  • PRINTER FRIENDLY
  •  

Tietou Gong (The Iron Head-The Exercise of Head Training)

Tietou Gong (The Iron Head-The Exercise of Head Training)
Tietou Gong is one of the unique skills of Shaolin Kung-fu. For example, a famous Shaolin monk...

Wohu Gong (The Crouching Tiger-the Exercise of Legs and Feet)

Wohu Gong (The Crouching Tiger-the Exercise of Legs and Feet)
The Crouching Tiger Exercise is one of (he unique skills of Shaolin Kung-fu, which has been...

Paida Gong (The Exercise of Beating Every Part of the Body)

Paida Gong (The Exercise of Beating Every Part of the Body)
At the beginning of practice, one beats every part of the body with a wood brick of 33 cm long,...

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.

search

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,...
  • Drunken Lu Zhishen Putting Mount Wutai in an Uproar
    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...
  • The Movie Drunken Master
    The Movie Drunken Master
    The Movie Drunken Master
    In the movie, when Wong Fei Hung (a martial artist and a Chinese folk hero) was young, he was nothing but a mischievous boy in his father's eye. Later, after suffering lots of frustrations, Wong...

Related Topics

    Chinese Kungfu
    Chinese Kungfu
    Chinese Kungfu, also called "martial art", is a sport item created by the Chinese people during a...
    Outlaws of the Marsh
    Outlaws of the Marsh
    Outlaws of the Marsh, written more than 600 years ago, is the first vernacular novel with Chapter...
    Wuxia (Martial Arts) Novels
    Wuxia (Martial...
    The wuxia novel is a Chinese novel genre, which features martial arts heroes, i.e. swordsmen and...
    The Chinese Way of Urging People to Drink
    The Chinese Way...
    The hospitality of the Chinese can be thoroughly seen at banquets. More often than not,...
    Top Ten Brands of Wine in China
    Top Ten Brands of...
    China is the hometown of wine, the cradle of wine culture, and one of the first winemaking...
    Drinking Customs on Festivals
    Drinking Customs...
    The important festivals of a year enjoyed by Chinese are accompanied by corresponding drinking...

Related Books

  • Taijiquan

    Taijiquan is a traditional Chinese martial art and a Chinese national treasure. It integrates the...
  • Shaolin Kung Fu

    China leads the world in kung fu, and the Shaolin Temple is where all martial arts are sourced....
  • Selected Short Stories from China...

    21 Chinese short stories written in the 1990s were selected - a tiny portion of the literary...
  • Explore Cultural China

      Scenery

      Natural Scenery | Historic Sites | Nature Reserves | City Guide | Cultural Travel |

      Traditions

      Myths and Legends | Festivals and Customs | Clothing and Ornaments | Folk Handicraft | Folk Art | Folk Residences | Ethnic Minority |

      Kaleidoscope

      Medicine and Healthcare | Food Culture | Chinese Kungfu | Science and Invention | Games | Ming and Qing Furniture | Traditional Trades |

      Arts

      Calligraphy and Painting | Sculpture | Architecture | Opera | Music and Dance | Artwork |

      History

      Historical Figures | Historical Events | Archeology | Classics | Anecdotes | Literature | Humanistic Spirit |

      Culture News

      Cultural Exchange | Festivals & Exhibition | Archeology & Heritage | Travel | Life & Others | Entertainment |

      Shanghai

      Shanghai Expo | Chinese Elements | History of Shanghai | Heritage | Municipal Life | Life Service Info |

      Format

      Video Center | Book | Cultural-China Blog | E-Books

      Tools & Games

      Chinese Characters | Chinese Superstitious Wallpapers | Greeting Cards |

      About

      About Cultural China | Statement Friendes Links | Contact |

      © 2007-2010 cultural-china.com. All rights reserved.