FACTOID # 59: People might eat oats when they're hungry, but people from Hungary don't eat oats.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

SEARCH ALL

FACTS & STATISTICS    Advanced view

Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 

 

(* = Graphable)

 

 


Encyclopedia > Choy Li Fut

Choy Lay Fut, Choy Li Fut, Choy Lee Fut or Tsai Li Fo, (蔡李佛) is a Chinese martial art developed by Grandmaster Chan Heung (陳享) in 1836 at King Mui, and is highly popular in Hong Kong. Learning the basics from a his uncle the Shaolin monk Chan Yeun Wu, Chan Heung enrolled at a Shaolin temple, and, after completing a decade of training, Chan Heung developed his own style.


Choy Lee Fut is actually the names of people Heung trained under, namely: Masters Choy Fok, and Lee Yau Shan.

Contents

History

Master Chan Heung, the founder of Choy Li Fut, was born in the Kwang-Tung province of China in 1806. At the age of seven, he began to study Gung Fu from his uncle, who had trained in the Shaolin temple. By age 15, Chan was the leading boxer in his area. When he was 17, he studied under his uncle's senior classmate, a Shaolin expert named Li Yau Shan. Within several years, Chan had absorbed all the teachings of Master Li. At that point, his teacher sent him to seek further instruction from a reclusive Shaolin priest named Choy Fok.


According to the popular account, Chan found Choy Fok, but the monk told him that he had given up the practice of Gung Fu to dedicate his life to the study of Buddhism. He invited Chan to join him in his spiritual studies. Instead of being discouraged, Chan Heung humbly accepted the monk's offer to become a disciple of Buddha. After several years, Choy Fok was satisfied with Chan Heung's character and patience, and for the next eight years, taught his new student everything that he knew of Gung Fu.


At the age of 29, Chan returned to his native village, analyzing and synthesizing everything he had learned from his teachers. In 1836, he founded a new style of fighting, and named it after his two instructors Choy and Li. He added the suffix Fut, which meant Buddha, to pay homage to the Shaolin temple and reflect his years of Buddhist study.


These were troublesome times in China, with the following decades seeing the first Opium War, the Taiping rebellion, and finally the Boxer rebellion. Choy Li Fut, like other styles, was used by rebels in their struggle against the Manchus in the 1800's, and was driven underground by government interdiction.


The style was popularized in the United States in the late 20th century by masters such as Lee Koon Hung, Tat Mau Wong (王達謀), Doc Fai Wong (黄德輝), and others, who represent different contemporary branches (Buck Sing (北勝) and Hung Sing (雄勝)).


Technical information

Choy Lay Fut is a characterized as a "hard" style, and combines some of the long-range circular movements characteristic of northern styles with the shorter, more direct movements indicative of southern styles. As a traditional shao-lin style, it includes techniques based on animals (e.g., tiger, dragon, crane, leopard, snake); but it is also makes extensive use of long, swinging arm techniques and twisting body motions. The curriculum is designed so that soldiers could quickly gain practical proficiency; it also incorporates a range of weapons, though concentrating most on the sword and spear that would be available to the typical soldier. Several common movements have specific sounds associated with them, supposedly so that friendly forces could recognize each other in battle. Certain sounds/calls are also used to force certain breathing patterns for strikes to help with the specific delivery of the strikes.


Branches

Like many styles of Kung Fu, Choy Lay Fut has had several branches issue from the original founder. These are based on the different lineages of teaching. They differ not only in terms of training and emphasis but also on what they see to be the true history of the style. There are three main branches of Choy Lay Fut.


The Hung Sing (雄勝) branch

Stub, more to follow, contributors welcome.


The Buck Sing (北勝) branch

Stub, more to follow, contributors welcome.


The Chan Family branch

Stub, more to follow, contributors welcome.


External links

Hung Sing branch

http://www.hungsing.com/


Buck Sing branch

http://www.buksing.com/


Chan Family branch

Chan Heung At seven years old, Chan Heung began learning martial arts under his uncle Chan Yuen Woo. Yuen Woo was a famed master from Shaolin Temple, and taught his nephew the Buddha Style Fist or Fut Ga Kuen.


After years of study with his uncle, Chan Heung had become a consummate warrior by the early age of 15. To further his skills, Chan became a student of Lee Yau San, a Shaolin practitioner of the Lee Family Fist. Yau San was Yuen Woo's sihing or elder brother at Shaolin Temple.


Becoming proficient in the Lee Family style, Chan Heung was then referred to the Shaolin monk Choi Fook to further his martial arts knowledge. After years of intensive study with the Buddhist recluse, Chan Heung revised what he had learned and formed a new system. He combined his knowledge of 3 martial arts systems and called it "Choi Lee Fut" in honour of his teachers.


Three styles that constitute Choi Lee Fut are as follows.


Chan Yuen Woo and the Buddha Style Fist Chan Heung learned the Buddha Style Fist, or Fat Ga Kuen, from his uncle Chan Yuen Woo. Yuen Woo was a famed master of Shaolin Temple.


The Fut Ga Kuen style specializes in palm techniques. Both the left and right hand are used in attack and defence. Long and short-range footwork is employed.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Martial Arts Info - Choy Li Fut (855 words)
Choy Li Fut was developed in 1836 by Chan Heung, who learned martial arts from his uncle, a famous Shaolin Boxer.
Fut means Buddha in Cantonese, and was added to the name of his new style as an acknowledgement of his uncle and Shaolin roots of the system.
Choy fok was a monk from the northern shaolin temple, li yau-san and chan yuen-woo were from the southern shaolin temple so choy li fut is not a combi […] more
Choy Li Fut Kung Fu (890 words)
This Choy Lay Fut/Tsai Li Fo style of fighting was then passed down the generations of the family CHAN and then later spread more widely through and beyond China.Nowadays it is practised in many places around the world where the focus is still on a practical and dynamic level of skill.
The stances in Choy Li Fut are often difficult for beginners to grasp at first.
Choy Li Fut masters of the past have also developed very particular striking techniques and many techniques are used both in offence or defence.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms, 1022, m