brianlkennedy
Orange Belt

That illustration is taken from a modern day manual for teaching people here in Taiwan how to do the Sung Chiang Battle Arrays ([FONT=新]宋江鎮[/FONT]). Although nowadays these performances are folk temple performances, in these past these Sung Chiang Battle Arrays were used to train Taiwanese village militias. They were the real deal on traditional Chinese martial arts.
The real deal on traditional Chinese martial arts is almost completely opposite from modern day Chinese martial arts. Let me highlight the differences; if you were the average Chinese martial artists of let us say 1776 (since we are talking about militias, albeit Chinese ones, let us pick the year America declared independence!):
You practiced first with weapons, mostly with weapons. Empty hand forms were a very, very small part of your training day.
You practiced mostly in military formation with you fellow village militiamen (and yes, back then it was all men—brave kung fu girl Mulan is a Disneyland deal).
- Your practice placed a huge emphasis on very basic strikes and jabs with your weapon
- Your teacher did not much care about your structure, how low your stances were, or whether the chi was shooting out your hands. What they wanted is good anaerobic endurance (the ability to fight full bore for 1 to 3 minutes without gassing) and strong upper body to be able to manipulate the weapon without your arms getting tired and weak.
- Your training often involved a rattan shield. It was a major skill to be able to crouch down behind the shield to protect yourself from projectile weapons such as arrows, shrapnel (Chinese used all kinds of what in modern terms would be called claymore mines, or grenades) and maybe musket fire (yes there were firearms in China and in Taiwan in the 1700s)
- The key quality was keeping in formation and doing what you were told when you were told. No individual stars out there with their double half moon spears "wowing" the other side with their form.
Take care,
Brian