Notes
Cai Yuming (蔡玉明, 1853–1910) — founder of Five Ancestors
On this page
Cai Yuming (蔡玉明 / Cài Yùmíng; Hokkien Chua Giok Beng, 1853–1910) is the **documented founder of **Five Ancestors Fist (五祖拳) — and, with the Cantonese Chan Heung and the Hakka Cheung Lai-chuen, one of the handful of Southern masters whose founding of an art is a matter of record rather than legend.
Life
Cai Yuming was born in 1853 in Jinjiang (晉江), in the Quanzhou (泉州) region of Fujian — the Hokkien heartland and one of the candidate homes of the legendary Southern Shaolin. He trained across several of the region's older systems — the Taizu, Luohan and White Crane streams among them — and in roughly the 1880s synthesized them into a single art, Five Ancestors Fist, named for the five sources he drew together.
A celebrated fighter and teacher in Quanzhou, Cai built a system that travelled extraordinarily well: through his students and the wider Hokkien emigration it took root across Taiwan and Southeast Asia — the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia — where it remains a major art today. He died in 1910.
See also
Five Ancestors (五祖拳) — the art he founded
The Fujian Arts — the cluster it belongs to
Chan Heung (陳享) — the Cantonese counterpart: another documented Southern founder
Sources
[1] Five Ancestors, English Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Ancestors) — Cai Yuming's dates, his Quanzhou origin, the 1880s synthesis, and the spread of the art through the Hokkien diaspora.
Details
- Section:
- Notes
- Updated:
- 2026-06-06
More in this section
- The Hakka Short-Bridge Arts (客家拳) — the close-range family
- Bak Mei (白眉) — "White Eyebrow," the explosive short-power art
- Cheung Lai-chuen (張禮泉, 1882–1964) — the maker of modern Bak Mei
- Southern Dragon (龍形) — the floating-and-sinking wave art
- Southern Praying Mantis (南螳螂) — the Hakka mantis
- The Fujian Arts (福建) — the crane family and the road to Okinawa