Notes
Baji (八極拳)
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Bajiquan (八極拳, "Eight Extremes Boxing") is a close-range northern art of explosive short-power. Where Taiji yields and Xingyi advances on a line, Baji demolishes from contact distance — close enough that practitioners say "a needle could not fit between us." Its hallmark is the 震腳 (zhenjiao) — a ground-stamp that grounds the structure and drives whole-body shock into the strike — combined with 沉墜 (sinking), 十字 (cross), and 崩 (collapsing) power-methods that issue power in instants. The full traditional pairing is Baji for close range, Pigua for long range (八極對劈掛) — together via the Ma family's Tongbei (通備) framework.
Origin and lineage
Baji's recorded line begins in Cangzhou / Mengcun (滄州 / 孟村), Hebei — a Muslim (Hui) region famous for martial arts — with the figure of Wu Zhong (吳鍾, 1712–1802) of the Wu family. From him the Mengcun Wu family transmission is direct and unbroken into the present.
The most famous outside line:
李書文 (Li Shuwen, 1864–1934) — "Divine Spear Li" (神槍李書文), the great Republican-era spear master and Baji teacher, whose students included the bodyguards of the deposed Manchu emperor.
霍殿閣 (Huo Dian'ge) — Li Shuwen's disciple, who became the personal bodyguard of Puyi (the last Qing emperor) in Manchuria. The Huo family Baji (霍氏八極) is the lineage that descends from this branch.
劉雲樵 (Liu Yunqiao, 1909–1992) — Li Shuwen's late disciple; took the art to Taiwan in 1949, formed the Wutan (武壇) school, and trained Chiang Kai-shek's personal bodyguards. The major source of Baji's spread in Taiwan and the West.
In the People's Republic, the Wu Lianzhi (吳連枝) branch in Mengcun is the orthodox living transmission of the original Wu family.
What it looks like
發勁 (fajin) by ground-stamp — the foot stamps the ground and the resulting shock travels through the body into the issued strike. Done well it's silent inside; loud outside.
沉墜勁 (sinking power), 十字勁 (cross power) — the body sinks at the moment of contact and the structure twists into a cross-shape (one shoulder forward, the opposite hip back), so the force arrives whole.
頂抱單提胯纏 — the classical eight-character power formula: 頂 ding (crowning / pushing up), 抱 bao (embracing), 單 dan (singular), 提 ti (lifting), 胯 kua (hip), 纏 chan (coiling), with two more depending on the lineage.
Distinctive footwork — the 闖步 (chuang bu), lunging step that crashes through the line; the 碾步 (nian bu), grinding step that pivots into the close.
Signature material
小八極 (Small Baji) — the root short form, taught first.
大八極 (Big Baji) — the longer, more elaborated form.
六大開 (Six Big Openings) — the six core power-openings the art is organized around: 頂 crown, 抱 embrace, 單 single, 提 lift, 胯 hip, 纏 coil.
猛虎硬爬山 (Ferocious-Tiger Hard Climb-the-Mountain) — a classical lineage drill.
劈掛 Pigua pairing — long-range whipping-arm work; classically every Baji practitioner also trains Pigua.
Primary sources
The Baji document situation is harder than the other styles: the major 李書文 / 霍殿閣 / 劉雲樵 lineage texts are 20th-century and mostly still in copyright. We hold:
**吳金賢 ed. **八極拳國術秘本 (1936) — Bajiquan Guoshu Secret Text; an anonymous Republican-era manual edited by Wu Jinxian. The only fully open public-domain dedicated Baji manual currently locatable. Held in the codex's
Sources/northern-kungfu-manuals/.
For everything else (Liu Yunqiao's 八極拳, Wu Lianzhi's 吳氏開門八極拳 series, the Huo family's published material): citation-only.
Video
小八極 Small Baji full form — root form, clean walkthrough.
孟村八極拳 小架一路 — Mengcun Wu-family orthodox.
霍氏八極拳 小架式 — Huo Dian'ge branch.
See also
Northern Kung Fu Styles — Baji in the broader Northern canon
Sources
[1] Baji Quan, Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org) — Mengcun origin, Li Shuwen and Huo Dian'ge / Liu Yunqiao lineages.
[2] 八極拳國術秘本, ed. Wu Jinxian (1936) — the held public-domain manual.
Details
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- Notes
- Updated:
- 2026-06-05