A Short History of Pakua Chang
Although there is no agreement among historians and authorities
on the subject as to the origin of Pakua Chang, there is general
consensus of Martial Activity in the Wutang Mountains from about
the year 2600 B.C. onward. The Pakua Trigrams, consisting of a
number of solid and broken lines, rounding a circle in groups of
three is itself derived from the I-Ching or 'Book of Changes'
believed to be some 5,000 years old, and whose writing is credited
to the Legendary Yellow Emperor Fu Hsi.
Originally a book of divination and later a manual for
interpreting the order of all things in life, the I-Ching, one of
the Five Classics of Confucianism, also promoted correct living,
morality, and the harmonious understanding of man's place in the
Universe; all concepts generally taught and practiced by
practitioners of Pakua Chang.
The central figure in the history of Pakua Chang is Tung
Hai-Chuan, (1798-1879), who is widely credited with the creation
of Pakua, or at the very least, its standardization and
dissemination through his two principal students, Yun Fu, and
Cheng Ting-Hua.
Tung Hai-Chuan, throughout his lifetime, always refused to
discuss the origins or history of Pakua Chang, and claimed to have
learned his art from a mountain Taoist in Kiangsu Province. His
reticense in disclosing information about his art or himself is
not unlike that of Chinese Boxing Masters in the U.S. during the
1960's who chose to maintain anonymity possibly due to immigration
problems or to a notorious past history. |