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The Bubishi (武備志) — White Crane, karate, and a tale of two texts

Updated 2026-06-06
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The Bubishi is the single most important text linking Chinese boxing to Okinawan karate — the manual that Okinawan masters called "the bible of karate." It is also the source of a persistent confusion, because two completely different works share the name 武備志. Untangling them is the first task, and a good example of how a careful resource earns its keep.

Two texts, one name

What the Okinawan Bubishi actually is

The Okinawan Bubishi is not a single authored book but an edited anthology of often-unrelated articles — fragments on White Crane** and Monk Fist (Luohan) boxing**, on vital-point striking and grappling, and on herbal medicine and healing — copied and recopied by hand. Its oldest surviving copies date only to the 1930s, though the material it gathers is older. As the martial-arts historians Andreas Quast and Benjamin Judkins stress, its value is better understood as a tradition that conveys legitimacy than as a reliable historical record.

The karate bridge

Whatever its limits as history, the Bubishi's importance to karate is real and documented:

  • It was revered and copied by the founding masters of Okinawan karate — Funakoshi Gichin quoted it, Mabuni Kenwa published a version, and Miyagi Chojun is said to have drawn the name Goju-ryu from one of its poems;

  • It explicitly credits its White Crane material to Fang Qiniang of Yongchun (永春方七娘) — tying the Okinawan text directly back to the Fujian crane tradition;

  • It is, in short, the textual artifact of the Fujian → Okinawa transmission — the paper trail of how southern Chinese crane boxing became part of karate.

Reading it

Patrick McCarthy's English translation, Bubishi: The Bible of Karate (Tuttle), is the standard scholarly edition — and is in copyright, so the wiki links rather than reproduces it. Mao Yuanyi's separate 1621 Wubei Zhi is public domain and freely readable at the libraries below.

See also

Fujian White Crane (白鶴拳) — the art the Bubishi credits to Fang Qiniang

The Fujian Arts — the road to Okinawa

Source Texts — the wiki's other primary manuals

Sources

[1] Bubishi (karate), English Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubishi_(karate)) — the Okinawan manuscript, its contents, its 1930s copies, and its role in karate.

[2] Wubei Zhi, English Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wubei_Zhi) and the Library of Congress copy (loc.gov/item/2004633695) — Mao Yuanyi's 1621 military encyclopedia, the other 武備志, public domain.

[3] Patrick McCarthy, Bubishi: The Bible of Karate (Tuttle) — the standard translation (in copyright; linked, not reproduced). Plus Benjamin Judkins, Kung Fu Tea (chinesemartialstudies.com), on returning the Bubishi to its Chinese roots.

The Bubishi (武備志) — White Crane, karate, and a tale of two texts — wulin