Hung Ga
Hung Ga (洪家), Hung Kuen (洪拳), or Hung Ga Kuen (洪家拳) is a southern Chinese martial art belonging to the southern Shaolin styles. The hallmarks of Hung Ga are strong stances, notably the horse stance, or "si ping ma" (四平馬), and strong hand techniques, notably the bridge hand and the versatile tiger claw. Traditionally, students spent anywhere from several months to three years in stance training, often sitting only in horse stance from half an hour to several hours at a time, before learning any forms. Each form could then take a year or so to learn, with weapons learned last. In current times, this mode of instruction is generally considered impractical for students, who have other concerns beyond practicing kung fu. However, some instructors still follow traditional guidelines and make stance training the majority of their beginner training. Hung Ga is sometimes mischaracterized as solely external—that is, reliant on brute physical force rather than the cultivation of qi—even though the student advances progressively toward an internal focus.
洪家 | |
Hung Ga | |
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Pinyin: | Hóng Jiā |
Yale Cantonese: | Hùhng Gār |
Literally | "Hung family" |
洪拳 | |
Hung Kuen | |
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Pinyin: | Hóng Quán |
Yale Cantonese: | Hùhng Kyùhn |
Literally | "immense fist" |
Part of a series on |
Chinese martial arts (Wushu) |
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Also known as | Hung Ga, Hung Gar, Hung Kuen, Hung Ga Kuen, Hung Gar Kuen |
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Focus | Striking |
Country of origin | China |
Creator | Hung Hei-gun |
Famous practitioners | (see below) |
Parenthood | Shaolin Kung Fu styles such as 5 animals, Mok Gar (additional influence for Wong Fei Hung lineage) |
Descendant arts | Choy ga, Fut Gar, Hung Fut, Jow-Ga Kung Fu |
Olympic sport | No |