八極拳 Baji Quan — The Fist of Eight Extremities
八極拳
Bā Jí Quán
The Fist of Eight Extremities
千招有,不如一招熟
“Fear not a thousand techniques — fear the one that has been mastered.”
— Li Shu Wen 李書文, Grandmaster of Baji Quan
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The Birth of an Art

源起

Baji Quan (八極拳 — literally “Fist of the Eight Extremities”) is one of China’s most ancient and formidable martial traditions. Its verifiable history traces to the early Qing Dynasty (c. 17th–18th century), rooted in the Muslim Hui communities of Cangzhou, Hebei Province — a region so renowned for martial arts it earned the epithet “the hometown of martial heroes” (武術之鄉). The recognized first transmitter in the modern historical record is Wu Zhong (吳鐘), known as the “Great Spear King,” who taught the art in the villages of Mengcun and Luotuo, even passing it to his daughter Wu Rong — a remarkable act of transmission for the era.

The name itself carries philosophical depth. Master Liu Yun Qiao, the art’s great 20th-century transmitter, theorized a connection to the Jixiao Xinshu (紀效新書), the celebrated military manual of Ming Dynasty general Qi Jiguang (1528–1588), where a form called “Bazi Quangùn” (巴子拳棍) is listed among the foremost fighting arts of the age. The archaic, plain style and the importance given to the six-harmony long spear (六合大槍) suggest military origins dating to the early Ming Dynasty (around 1368 CE). The name was later refined to 八極 — “Eight Extremities” — evoking the idea that force reaches to the furthest bounds of the universe in all eight directions.

From Cangzhou, the art bifurcated into two great lineages: the Mengcun line, preserved among the Hui Muslim families, and the Luotuo Han line — from which the most celebrated masters, including Li Shu Wen and the Ma brothers, would emerge. By the late Qing Dynasty, Baji Quan had spread throughout northern China’s military networks, was adopted by warlord armies, and was elevated to a required subject at the Central National Martial Arts Academy (中央國術館) in Nanjing in 1927.

Nature of the Art

拳法特色

Baji Quan is classified among China’s external hard styles (外家拳), though its internal power development belies a simplistic label. Its essence lies in close-range explosive force — smashing through the opponent’s defenses using the integrated power of the whole body, driven from a rooted stance. It is a warrior’s art stripped to necessity: no flourish, no performance, only devastating function.

Core Weapon
The Body as Weapon
Training cultivates explosive use of all eight body parts: head (頭), shoulders (肩), elbows (肘), hands (手), hips (臀), groin (胯), knees (膝), and feet (足). The signature technique Tieshan Kao (鐵山靠 — “Iron Mountain Lean”) uses the entire body as a battering ram.
Power Generation
Progressive Jin (勁)
Force training progresses through three stages: Chenzhui jin (沉墜勁 — sinking, rooting force), Shizi jin (十字勁 — cross-shaped radiating force), and finally Chansi jin (纏絲勁 — silk-reeling spiraling force). Power rises from foot, through waist, to hand.
Distinctive Movement
Stomping & Shaking
The thunderous zhen jiao (震腳 — stomping step) is Baji’s trademark entry method, generating ground energy that travels upward into the strike and psychologically destabilizes the opponent. The art’s range is described as: Jin Gang Ba Shi for mid-range, Baji for close, and Pigua for long.
Core Curriculum
Six Grand Openings
The Liu Da Kai (六大開 — Six Grand Openings): Ding (頂), Bao (抱), Dan (單), Ti (提), Kua (胯), and Chan (纏) form the foundational combat grammar, each representing a way to disrupt, control, and destroy an opponent’s structure in close quarters.
Philosophical Essence
Simple & Ancient
Sources consistently describe Baji’s character as zhishi gupu (質實古樸 — “solid, honest, and ancient”). There are no decorative movements. Every technique exists for one purpose. As Li Shu Wen taught: master one technique perfectly rather than accumulating thousands of empty forms.
Weapons Heritage
The Great Spear
Baji is inseparable from the Liu He Da Qiang (六合大槍 — Six Harmony Long Spear). The spear’s principles of penetration, root, and explosive extension directly inform the empty-hand system. Li Shu Wen’s mastery of the spear earned him the legendary title Shen Qiang (神槍 — “Divine Spear”).

Baji & the Fate of China

與中國歷史之關聯

No martial art in Chinese history has been more deeply woven into the fabric of political power than Baji Quan. From the final decades of the Qing Dynasty through the turbulent Republic, the civil war, and the parallel governments of the People’s Republic and the Republic of China on Taiwan, Baji Quan moved alongside those who shaped the nation’s destiny.

Huo Dian Ge (霍殿閣), the senior disciple of Li Shu Wen, became the martial arts instructor and personal bodyguard of Puyi (溥儀), the Last Emperor of China. His nephew Huo Qing Yun later opened a school near the Manchukuo imperial palace in Changchun. Meanwhile, Li Shu Wen himself was repeatedly recruited to train the armed forces of China’s most powerful warlords and military commanders — serving successively under Yuan Shikai’s Beiyang Army, General Xu Lan Zhou, General Li Jing Lin, and General Shen Hong Lie’s naval forces in Shandong Province.

When the Central National Martial Arts Academy (中央國術館) was established in Nanjing in 1927 under General Zhang Zhi Jiang, Baji Quan was enshrined as a required subject — spreading the art nationwide and codifying it within the military and national identity of the Republic of China. This institution would directly shape the generation of masters who would carry the art to Taiwan.

“The personal guards of Puyi, Chiang Kai-shek, Mao Zedong, Chiang Ching-kuo, and Lee Teng-hui all trained in Baji Quan.”
— From Taiwanese and Chinese historical martial arts records (八極拳歷史文獻)

This extraordinary fact — that the bodyguards of both the Communist and Nationalist leaderships, as well as the last imperial court, trained in the same art — speaks to Baji Quan’s singular status. It was trusted in the most dangerous moments in Chinese history, when a single failure of protection could alter the course of a civilization.

The Line of Transmission

傳承脈絡

This is the lineage through which the living art reaches us — each master a living bridge across history, war, exile, and ocean.

Li Shu Wen
李書文 — “The Divine Spear” c. 1862–1934 · Cangzhou, Hebei Province, China
Born in poverty in Yanshan County, Cangzhou, Li Shu Wen dedicated his entire being to the cultivation of Baji Quan’s combat art. Training relentlessly — reportedly walking twelve li to Luotuo Village twice daily for twelve consecutive years — he elevated the art to a level that no generation before or since has surpassed. He unified Baji’s hard power with the flowing reach of Pigua Zhang (劈掛掌) and the suppleness of Yi Jin Jing, creating what scholars call the “fourth great leap” in Baji’s history.

Known by the epithet Shen Qiang (神槍 — “Divine Spear”) for his transcendent mastery of the six-harmony long spear, and feared as Li Hen Zi (李狠子 — “Cruel Li”) for his no-mercy approach in challenge matches, he became the most celebrated Baji master in all of Chinese martial history. His signature dictum — “fear not a thousand techniques; fear the one that has been mastered” — remains the philosophical soul of the art. He was recruited to train troops for Yuan Shikai’s Beiyang Army and served as advisor to the 1927 Central National Martial Arts Academy in Nanjing. He accepted approximately twenty formal inner-chamber disciples in his lifetime, of whom Liu Yun Qiao was the last.
Liu Yun Qiao
劉雲樵 — “The Little Tyrant” 1909–1992 · Cangzhou → Taiwan · Colonel, R.O.C. Army
Born into a scholarly military family in Cangzhou’s Jibei Village — his grandfather had served as a prefectural magistrate and his father commanded Beiyang Army forces — Liu Yun Qiao was introduced to Li Shu Wen at age eight when Li Shu Wen was serving as his father’s troop instructor in 1916. Li accepted the boy as his final closed-door disciple (guanmen dizi 關門弟子), the most intimate of all discipleship ranks.

As a teenager accompanying Li Shu Wen to Shandong Province at General Zhang Xiang Wu’s invitation in 1931, the young Liu challenged and defeated every local martial artist presented to him, earning the name “Little Tyrant of Shandong” (山東小霸王). After Li Shu Wen’s death in 1934, Liu supplemented his Baji foundation by studying Six-Harmony Mantis Fist (六合螳螂拳) under Ding Zi Cheng, Eight Trigrams Palm (八卦掌) under the legendary Gong Bao Tian, and Wudang sword arts and Yang-family Taijiquan under Zhang Xiang Wu.

When Japan invaded China in 1937, Liu enrolled in the Huangpu Military Academy’s Seventh Branch in Shaanxi and graduated as an officer in 1939. He served in the anti-Japanese resistance — reportedly operating as a deep-cover intelligence agent with the codename Tianzi diyi hao (天字第一號 — “Number One Under Heaven”) — and later as commander in the Northwest theater. In 1949, following the Nationalist government’s retreat, Liu crossed to Taiwan, carrying the full inheritance of Li Shu Wen’s art across the Taiwan Strait.

After retiring from the military as a Colonel in the late 1960s, Liu’s life turned to a new mission. Recommended by his military academy classmate General Kong Ling Zhen to Chiang Kai-shek, he was appointed Security Advisor to the Presidential Guard (總統府侍衛室), teaching Baji Quan to the Republic of China’s most elite protection corps. He later trained four classes of instructors in Chiang Ching-kuo’s “Combined Forces Martial Arts Teacher Training Program,” including the legendary “Seven Seas Guard” unit — Chiang Ching-kuo’s innermost circle of presidential bodyguards.

In 1971, Liu founded the Wu Tan Magazine (武壇雜誌) and the Wu Tan National Martial Arts Promotion Center (武壇國術推廣中心) in Taipei. Though the magazine ceased publication in 1973 due to financial difficulties, the Wu Tan center continued and grew into an international network with branches across Taiwan, Japan, the United States, Malaysia, and beyond — thousands of students across generations. Liu Yun Qiao taught without tuition fees and used his own retirement pension to fund publications, driven by a singular mission: to preserve the authentic transmission before it was lost. He passed away in January 1992 in Taipei at the age of 84. Nearly a hundred government, political, and military figures attended his public memorial — an honor unprecedented for a martial artist in Taiwan’s history.
Dai Shi Zhe
戴士哲 — Wu Tan Generation “Wu” (武) Taiwan · Direct Disciple of Liu Yun Qiao
Dai Shi Zhe (Wade-Giles: Tai Shih-Che) belongs to the first generation of direct disciples trained by Liu Yun Qiao within the Wu Tan system, holding the generational rank character Wu (武) — the first character of the Wu Tan generational poem: 武壇光輝照耀寰宇 (“The Wu Tan’s radiance illuminates the universe”). He received the full transmission of Li Shu Wen’s Baji Quan as preserved by Liu Yun Qiao, along with the associated curriculum of Pigua Zhang, Six-Harmony Mantis Fist, and Eight Trigrams Palm. His discipleship represents the first link in the chain from mainland China’s classical tradition to the living lineage in the Americas.
Y
Yuri Jimenez
Wu Tan Lineage · Direct Student of Dai Shi Zhe
Yuri Jimenez received his transmission of the Liu Yun Qiao lineage Baji Quan directly under Master Dai Shi Zhe, inheriting the authentic curriculum as it flows from Li Shu Wen through Liu Yun Qiao’s Wu Tan system. His training represents the continuation of the living chain across geographical and cultural boundaries — the art carried beyond Taiwan’s shores into the wider world, carrying within it the accumulated depth of Cangzhou’s most celebrated fighting tradition.
L
Luis Mendez
Student of Yuri Jimenez · Present Day
The living continuation of this unbroken line — from the dusty training grounds of Luotuo Village in Cangzhou, through the halls of Taiwanese presidential palaces, across oceans and generations. Luis Mendez carries the inheritance of Li Shu Wen’s complete system: the rooted stance, the six grand openings, the iron-mountain shoulder strike, the thunderous stomping entry, and above all, the teacher’s eternal instruction — master one thing deeply rather than accumulate a thousand things shallowly. The art lives in every practiced repetition.

The Art Crosses the Strait

渡海傳藝

The story of Baji Quan’s transmission to Taiwan is inseparable from one of the 20th century’s great historical ruptures — the Chinese Civil War and the 1949 retreat of the Republic of China government to Taiwan. When the Kuomintang forces crossed the Taiwan Strait, they carried with them an entire civilization’s worth of cultural, military, and artistic knowledge that would otherwise have been severely disrupted on the mainland during the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976).

Liu Yun Qiao arrived in Taiwan as a military officer, but his deeper mission — perhaps unconscious at first — was to become the custodian of Li Shu Wen’s legacy. For nearly two decades he lived quietly. The turn came through his military connections: the reorganization of the Presidential Guard in 1967 created the opportunity that would define the second half of his life. Appointed to teach the Republic of China’s most trusted protectors, Liu effectively institutionalized Baji Quan at the highest levels of the Taiwanese state, just as his teacher Li Shu Wen had done with the Beiyang Army and later the Central National Martial Arts Academy decades before.

The founding of Wu Tan (武壇) in 1971 transformed this private transmission into a public institution. Taiwan became not merely a refuge for Baji Quan, but its new global center. While the Cultural Revolution suppressed and distorted traditional martial arts across mainland China, the Wu Tan lineage preserved the art in its complete classical form — the forms, the weapons, the combat methodology, and crucially, the spirit of Li Shu Wen’s teaching philosophy.

Early Qing Dynasty — c. 1700s
Wu Zhong (吳鐘), first recorded transmitter, teaches Baji Quan in Mengcun and Luotuo villages, Cangzhou, Hebei.
Late 19th Century
Li Shu Wen begins his legendary twelve-year daily training regimen in Luotuo Village, eventually surpassing all his teachers and transforming Baji into a complete fighting system.
1907–1931
Li Shu Wen serves successively as martial arts instructor to multiple warlord armies; joins the 1910 Tianjin Chinese Martial Artists Association; serves as advisor to the 1927 Nanjing Central National Martial Arts Academy.
1916
Eight-year-old Liu Yun Qiao begins training under Li Shu Wen at his family home in Cangzhou, becoming Li’s final closed-door disciple.
1931
Young Liu Yun Qiao defeats all challengers in Shandong Province, earning the title “Little Tyrant of Shandong.” He begins supplementary studies in Mantis Fist, Eight Trigrams Palm, and sword arts.
1933–1934
Li Shu Wen passes away. Estimates of the cause differ: the Liu Yun Qiao line holds he was poisoned by a rival at an inn in Weifang, Shandong; the Li family line holds he died of natural causes in Tianjin.
1937–1949
Liu Yun Qiao fights in the anti-Japanese War, reportedly serves as an intelligence operative, rises to military command. In 1949, crosses to Taiwan with the retreating Republic of China government.
1968
Liu Yun Qiao is appointed Security Advisor to the Presidential Guard of the Republic of China and begins teaching Baji Quan to the elite protection corps of President Chiang Kai-shek.
1971
Founding of Wu Tan Magazine (武壇雜誌) and Wu Tan National Martial Arts Promotion Center in Taipei — the institutional home of the Li Shu Wen lineage for the next half century.
1978
Liu Yun Qiao trains four cohorts of instructors for Chiang Ching-kuo’s “Seven Seas Guard” presidential protection unit — the most intimate security detail of Taiwan’s president.
1992
Liu Yun Qiao passes away in Taipei at age 84. His students — including Dai Shi Zhe and others of the “Wu” generation — carry the living tradition into the world. Wu Tan branches now exist across four continents.
Present Day
Through Dai Shi Zhe → Yuri Jimenez → Luis Mendez, the unbroken chain of Li Shu Wen’s Baji Quan continues its living transmission.

八極拳 · Bā Jí Quán · The Fist of Eight Extremities

Lineage: Li Shu Wen 李書文 → Liu Yun Qiao 劉雲樵 → Dai Shi Zhe 戴士哲 → Yuri Jimenez → Luis Mendez

Wu Tan System (武壇系) · Li Shu Wen Branch (李氏八極拳)

Historical sources: 中華民國八極拳協會 · 武壇國術推廣協會 · 滄縣志 · 劉雲樵《八極拳》(1985) ·
中文維基百科 (zh-TW) · 香港01武備志 · 知乎八極拳史料 · 痞客邦八極拳協會文獻