Notes
Five Elements & Twelve Animals (五行十二形) — the theory of Xingyi
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Xingyiquan organizes its entire technical world around two schemes: the Five Elements (五行) — five fundamental power-methods mapped to the classical Chinese elements — and the Twelve Animals (十二形) — imitative forms that apply those powers in the manners of different creatures. Together they make Xingyi unusually systematic for a traditional art: a small set of root methods, elaborated by a clear theory of how they generate and overcome one another.
The Five Elements — the five fists
The 五行拳 (wǔxíng quán), the "five-element fists," are the heart of the art. Each is a single power-method, paired with one of the five classical elements and — in the internal-medicine overlay the art inherits — with one of the five zang organs:
劈拳 (pī quán) — splitting, like an axe falling — element metal (金), organ the lung (肺).
鑽拳 (zuān quán) — drilling, like water boring upward — element water (水), organ the kidney (腎).
崩拳 (bēng quán) — crushing, a straight, arrow-like blow — element wood (木), organ the liver (肝).
炮拳 (pào quán) — pounding, like a cannon firing — element fire (火), organ the heart (心).
橫拳 (héng quán) — crossing, a rounding, spiraling block-strike — element earth (土), organ the spleen (脾).
This mapping is set out directly in Sun Lutang's Study of Xingyi Boxing (形意拳學) — "Pi Quan belongs to metal… within the body it is the lung; Beng Quan belongs to wood… the liver," and so on. (The recitation order varies between teachers — often 劈崩鑽炮橫 — but the element pairings are fixed regardless of how the list is chanted.)
The generating and overcoming cycles
Because the fists carry elements, they inherit the elements' 生 (generating) and 剋 (overcoming) relationships — metal generates water, water generates wood…; metal overcomes wood, wood overcomes earth…. In theory this gives a ready-made logic of attack and counter (a heng answers a beng, and so on).
The Twelve Animals
Where the five fists are the alphabet, the 十二形 (twelve animals) are the vocabulary — longer expressions that take the five powers and shape them into the characteristic movement of an animal: the dragon (龍), tiger (虎), monkey (猴), horse (馬), water-lizard (鼉), chicken (雞), harrier-hawk (鷂), swallow (燕), snake (蛇), tai-bird (鮐), eagle (鷹) and bear (熊) — the eagle and bear often trained as a single paired form.
The animals are not zoology. They are imitative training shapes — a way to drill an attribute (the snake's threading softness, the tiger's pouncing weight, the chicken's sharp single-leg balance) until it becomes the practitioner's own. Like the elements, they are scaffolding for skill, not claims about animals.
See also
Xingyi (形意拳) — the full style page
Zhan Zhuang (站樁) — the santi-shi post the five fists grow from
Sun Lutang (孫祿堂) — who set the five-element theory down in print
Concepts & Principles — the rest of the ideas behind the movement
Details
- Section:
- Notes
- Updated:
- 2026-06-05
More in this section
- Southern Kung Fu Styles (南拳) — A Field Guide
- Southern Shaolin & the Five Elders (南少林) — the founding myth examined
- Hung Ga (洪拳) — the tiger-crane art of the South
- Wong Fei-hung (黃飛鴻, 1847–1925) — the man behind the legend
- Choy Li Fut (蔡李佛) — the long-and-short synthesis
- Chan Heung (陳享, 1806–1875) — founder of Choy Li Fut