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title: Northern Kung Fu Styles — A Field Guide
---

A short field guide to the **Northern Chinese martial arts (北派)** — enough to tell them apart and know what you're watching. Northern styles tend toward longer stances, expansive footwork, kicks and leaps, and long-range entries. They divide loosely into **internal-leaning** (Bagua, Xingyi) and **external (外家)** systems.

## The internal-leaning three

### Bagua Palm 八卦掌

**Circle-walking.** You continuously walk a circle changing palms, training spiraling whole-body power, evasive footwork, and constant change — the *Yijing*'s eight trigrams made into movement. Founded by Dong Haichuan in nineteenth-century Beijing; main branches Cheng (程) and Yin (尹). Core practice: circle-walking plus the Eight Mother Palms.

### Xingyi 形意拳

**Straight-line intent.** The most direct internal art — advancing, blunt, decisive power built on the **Five Elements** (splitting, drilling, crushing, pounding, crossing) and **twelve animals**. Rooted in the standing post (三體式). Hebei, Shanxi, and Henan (Muslim 心意) branches.

### Baji 八極拳

**Close-range demolition.** Explosive short-power driven by a ground-stamp and whole-body shock — "eight extremes." From Cangzhou/Mengcun, Hebei; famous for bodyguards. Trained small-frame → large-frame → the Six Big Openings, and classically paired with Pigua for long range.

## Praying Mantis 螳螂拳

A Shandong system imitating the mantis's snatching and hooking, fused onto northern long-fist footwork — famous for the cocked-wrist **mantis hook** and a dense mix of "seven long, eight short" striking. Branches: **Seven Star (七星)**, **Plum Blossom (梅花)** and Taiji-Plum, **Six Harmony (六合)**, and **Eight Step (八步)**. Signature first form: **Beng Bu (崩步)**. The Wang Lang origin tale is legend; the documented art crystallized in nineteenth-century Laiyang.

## The external canon

### Tongbei 通背 / 通臂

"Power through the back" — long, relaxed, whipping arms snapping from the spine like a flail, with ape imagery (five-element 通背).

### Chuojiao 戳腳 + Fanzi 翻子

**Chuojiao** ("poking feet") is a kicking art of paired, low, fast kicks; **Fanzi** ("tumbling fist") is dense, rolling, continuous short blows. They are usually trained together as 戳腳翻子.

### Pigua 劈掛

Long-arm "chop-and-hang": huge circular whip power and a supple waist — the long-range complement to Baji (the Ma family fused the two as 通備).

### Cha 查拳 + Hua 華拳

Premier **long-fist** systems from Shandong (Cha from the Hui Muslim community): extended graceful postures, big stances, clear stop-start rhythm, kicks and leaps. Roots of modern competition wushu长拳.

### Tan Tui 彈腿 / 潭腿

Not a style but the **foundational drill-set** under many northern schools: short linear sequences each built on one springing front kick. Two lines — ten-road (Jingwu) and twelve-road (教門 Muslim).

### Northern Shaolin 北少林

The umbrella long-fist tradition: big frames, springy footwork, leaps, and the standard Tan Tui plus the classic Shaolin forms.

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  Each of these will grow into its own page with history, lineage, forms, source manuals, and video. This guide is the map; the territory is being filled in.
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