Notes
Wing Chun (詠春) — the centreline art
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Wing Chun (詠春, Yǒngchūn; Cantonese Wing Chun) is the most famous Chinese martial art in the world — the art of Ip Man and, through him, of Bruce Lee. It is a close-range system built on economy, structure, and sensitivity rather than size or power. It is also, for the historian, the clearest "handle with care" case in all of Chinese martial arts: hugely documented as a living practice, almost entirely legendary at its root.
How it moves
Wing Chun strips fighting down to a few ruthless principles:
The centreline (中線) — attack and defend along the shortest line between you and the opponent, occupying the centre and denying it to him;
Economy of motion — the shortest, most direct techniques; simultaneous attack and defence rather than block-then-hit;
Structure over strength — a relaxed, well-aligned frame that borrows and redirects force, so a smaller person can hold position against a stronger one;
Sticky hands (黐手, chi sao) — the signature training method, developing tactile reflexes and control through constant rolling contact;
The forms and tools — three empty-hand forms (小念頭 Siu Nim Tau, 尋橋 Chum Kiu, 標指 Biu Jee), the wooden dummy (木人樁), the long pole and the butterfly knives.
Lineage — documented late, legendary early
The firm chain runs Leung Jan → Chan Wah-shun (陳華順, "Moneychanger Wah," 1849–1913) → Ip Man (葉問) → Bruce Lee and a host of others who carried Wing Chun from Foshan to Hong Kong and then worldwide.
See also
Ip Man (葉問) — the master who brought Wing Chun to Hong Kong and the world
Southern Kung Fu Styles — the field guide
Southern Shaolin & the Five Elders — the Ng Mui legend in context
Sources
[1] Wing Chun, English Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wing_Chun) — the principles, the forms, the documented Leung Jan lineage, the Ng Mui / Yim Wing-chun legend, and the multiplicity of competing origin histories.
[2] Ip Man, English Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ip_Man) — the modern transmission to Hong Kong and Bruce Lee.
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