Mian Quan (original) (raw)
Il Mianquan (绵拳, pugilato ininterrotto o morbido) è uno stile di arti marziali cinesi del Nord della Cina, diffuso in particolare nella zona centrale della provincia di Hebei. Ha come punto centrale l'utilizzo del Rou (柔, morbido).Nel 1936 venne dimostrata una sequenza di Mianzhang (绵掌, palmo morbido) durante i giochi olimpici di Berlino da (傅淑云), donna, membro di una rappresentanza del Wushu Cinese. Wu Bin e altri identificano questa sequenza come appartenente al Mianquan.
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dbo:abstract | Mian Quan (literally "Cotton Fist") is a northern Chinese martial arts style which most likely originated in the province of Hebei. There is no definite given record of the creator or origin of the style. The theory for this style is that defense becomes offense and softness turns to hardness, and the practitioner's attacks always follow after the opponent's. Soft attacks gain the upper hand for a practitioner and sets up the opponent for a harder, more dominant array of movements. It was one of the wushu styles demonstrated at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany. Lan Suzhen performed a modified version of the art at the 1953 Tianjin Sports festival and it was generally well received. The style is simple to use as it does not require advanced movements such as grappling, therefore only using punches and kicks. Mian Quan requires balanced posture, with the majority of the body relaxed and a short-range attack span. Some lineage below, I could go more however our current system is not called Mian Quan hence I only offer 2 names. Mong Gwa Yu - creator of Mian Quan. Son Fu Ai (1888-1956) - last student of Mong Gwa Yu (en) Il Mianquan (绵拳, pugilato ininterrotto o morbido) è uno stile di arti marziali cinesi del Nord della Cina, diffuso in particolare nella zona centrale della provincia di Hebei. Ha come punto centrale l'utilizzo del Rou (柔, morbido).Nel 1936 venne dimostrata una sequenza di Mianzhang (绵掌, palmo morbido) durante i giochi olimpici di Berlino da (傅淑云), donna, membro di una rappresentanza del Wushu Cinese. Wu Bin e altri identificano questa sequenza come appartenente al Mianquan. (it) |
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink | https://web.archive.org/web/20070404154826/http:/www.chinavoc.com/kungfu/schools/cata_m.asp |
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dbo:wikiPageLength | 2543 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) |
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID | 920711611 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbr:Berlin,_Germany dbr:Mortal_Kombat:_Armageddon dbr:Mortal_Kombat:_Deception dbr:Mortal_Kombat_(series) dbr:Mileena dbr:1936_Summer_Olympics dbr:Strike_(attack) dbc:Chinese_martial_arts dbr:Grappling dbr:Hebei dbr:China dbr:Chinese_martial_arts dbr:Martial_arts |
dbp:aka | Mian Chuan, Continuous Chuan, Cotton Boxing, Soft Boxing (en) |
dbp:country | China (en) |
dbp:creator | Mong Gwa Yu (en) |
dbp:descendantArts | Yang Mian System (en) |
dbp:famousPract | Lan Suzhen (en) |
dbp:focus | dbr:Strike_(attack) |
dbp:hardness | Soft attacks gradually and stealthily become hard attacks (en) |
dbp:name | Mian Quan (en) |
dbp:olympic | No (en) |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate | dbt:Flagicon dbt:Reflist dbt:Martialart-stub dbt:Infobox_martial_art |
dcterms:subject | dbc:Chinese_martial_arts |
gold:hypernym | dbr:Style |
rdf:type | yago:WikicatChineseMartialArts yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:Act100030358 yago:Activity100407535 yago:Event100029378 yago:MartialArt100825443 yago:Protection100817680 yago:PsychologicalFeature100023100 yago:YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity yago:Self-defense100825192 |
rdfs:comment | Il Mianquan (绵拳, pugilato ininterrotto o morbido) è uno stile di arti marziali cinesi del Nord della Cina, diffuso in particolare nella zona centrale della provincia di Hebei. Ha come punto centrale l'utilizzo del Rou (柔, morbido).Nel 1936 venne dimostrata una sequenza di Mianzhang (绵掌, palmo morbido) durante i giochi olimpici di Berlino da (傅淑云), donna, membro di una rappresentanza del Wushu Cinese. Wu Bin e altri identificano questa sequenza come appartenente al Mianquan. (it) Mian Quan (literally "Cotton Fist") is a northern Chinese martial arts style which most likely originated in the province of Hebei. There is no definite given record of the creator or origin of the style. The style is simple to use as it does not require advanced movements such as grappling, therefore only using punches and kicks. Mian Quan requires balanced posture, with the majority of the body relaxed and a short-range attack span. (en) |
rdfs:label | Mianquan (it) Mian Quan (en) |
owl:sameAs | freebase:Mian Quan yago-res:Mian Quan wikidata:Mian Quan dbpedia-it:Mian Quan https://global.dbpedia.org/id/3a1Nb |
prov:wasDerivedFrom | wikipedia-en:Mian_Quan?oldid=920711611&ns=0 |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf | wikipedia-en:Mian_Quan |
is dbo:wikiPageDisambiguates of | dbr:Mian |
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of | dbr:Mian_Chuan |
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of | dbr:Mian dbr:Mileena dbr:Combat_sport dbr:List_of_Chinese_martial_arts dbr:Tai_chi dbr:Mian_Chuan |
is dbp:data of | dbr:Mileena |
is foaf:primaryTopic of | wikipedia-en:Mian_Quan |