Below is an excerpt from a biographical piece on Fu Zhen Song, the founder of the Fu internal martial arts system (which includes Baguazhang, Taijiquan and Xingyiquan) that appeared at Kung Fu Tea. The full post may be read here.
... Fu’s peripatetic life contains many twists and suggests lingering,
unanswered, question. Yet it also exemplifies the ability of the Chinese
martial arts to function as a pathway for social mobility for poor
youth from the countryside during times of almost unimaginable political
and social upheaval. Fu’s life was shaped by the banditry and
militarization that defined the end of the Qing dynasty, and the early
years of the Republic. The social networks shared by martial artists,
soldiers, armed escort companies and bandit chieftains proved to be
essential in not just surviving, but thriving, in the volatile world of
the 1920s and 1930s.
Through of his expertise in the martial arts, Fu received the support
and sponsorship of some of the most powerful men in China. In exchange
he would support their mission of building a strong and unified state
through martial practice. The entrance of the northern fighting systems
into the south was not a matter of happenstance. Both his contributions
to that event, and life in general, can only be understood when we
place them in the proper social/political context.
As with other entries in this series, I should begin with the
disclaimer that I am not a Baguazhang student and my own practice of the
southern arts falls far outside Fu’s sphere of influence. This
biographical sketch does not claim to use any secret or closely held
information. I have relied on a handful of published sources that have
discussed Fu Zhensong’s contributions to the internal arts as well as my
own understanding of political and social worlds that he attempted to
navigate.
By far the most helpful of the existing sources is Lin Chao Zhen’s (edited by Wei Ran Lin and Rick L. Wing) Fu Zhen Song’s Dragon Bagua Zhang
(Blue Snake Books 1997, 2010). While not attempting to be a scholarly
book, the historical discussions in the first two chapters of this work
are truly important. At one point in time, prior to the current
explosion of publications on the topic, this would have been one of the
best sources on modern Chinese martial arts history that readers could
hope to encounter. The editors of this work did an excellent job parsing
conflicting accounts and reconstructing the most likely course of
events. Yet as a popular work they did not list the specific sources
they were dealing with, and there appear to be a few minor mix-ups as
they move into discussion of the politically chaotic environment within
the KMT during the 1920s. Still, their book is clearly where anyone
interested in reading more about Fu’s life should begin.
Bandits and Boxers
Fu Qian Kun was born to a farming family in Mape Village in Henan
province sometime around 1872. The exact date, like many other details
of Fu’s early life, remains a matter of dispute.
Students of Chinese martial history will no doubt be familiar with
the many surveys of this region that have been completed by scholars
such as Esherick, Perry and Cohen
as they attempted to deal with the region’s long history of social
unrest and the eventual outbreak of the Boxer Rebellion in 1899-1900.
While most details of Fu’s childhood and early life are missing, we
actually know quite a bit about the world that he grew up in. Shaped as
it was by successive waves of famine and banditry, it is unsurprising
that the martial arts would be a critical force during his formative
years.
Tradition within the Fu family lineage note that Mape followed the
common regional pattern of setting aside a plot of land as a communal
boxing ground. The village would hire outside instructors who taught
skills that could be used for community defense, or simply for
entertainment during the agricultural slack season. Such village boxing
grounds would become central locations in the rise of Plum Blossom Boxing, the Big Sword Society and later the Yihi Spirit Boxing movement.
They would survive as a social institution well into the twentieth
century when they were repurposed as the training ground from the Red Spears that resisted local warlords, KMT tax collectors, and Japanese invaders with equal ferocity.
Given the weak position of the gentry and landlords in these more
marginal areas, boxing grounds became an important mean of social
organization in a crisis and a means of asserting local autonomy.
Lin notes that in 1888, when Fu Qian Kun was about 16, the village
decided that it was expedient to hire a communal martial arts
instructor. Chen Yanxi (father of Chen Fake) received a contract and
traveled from Chen Village to begin teaching at the Mape boxing ground.
It is believed that his curriculum would have included “Old Frame”
Chen-style Taiji (larger circles, with a pronounced emphasis on
striking), a push-hands method and probably spear work (a Chen family
specialty and practical skill for a community worried about bandit
incursions).
Lineage tradition states that Fu’s family was poor and, not being
able to afford the tuition, he stood outside the boxing ground copying
the movements from afar until Chen Yanxi took notice of him and,
realizing his dedication, accepted him as a student. Lin and Wing note
this reading of events sounds suspiciously like a number of other
stories. Such stereotyped tales are probably retold as a way to
emphasize the dedication of the student and the virtue of the teacher. A
more likely scenario is that, given the lack of security in the region,
all available young men would have been encouraged to study with the
boxing master as this functioned as a type of militia training that the
community as a whole benefitted from. Indeed, Fu’s martial practice
would remain intertwined with military for most of his life.
It is unclear exactly how long Chen Yanxi remained in Mape. We know
that after he left the village hired Jia Qi Shan, a Bagua master and
student of Dong Hai Chuan, as their next instructor. Sources say that
Fu studied with Jia for 8-9 years and may have become his formal
disciple. Lin and Wing caution that those numbers don’t actually fit
well with Fu’s life. This may be the amount of time he worked with both
Chen and Jia, or he perhaps he continued his association with Jia after
they both left the village. The existing accounts are not clear on this
point.
What we do know is that Fu began to go by the name Fu Zhen Song (“to
overcome the mountains”) around this time. With a background in both
Chen Taijiquan and Baguazhang, Jia encouraged his student to travel to
Beijing in order to gain connections and experience the larger world of
martial arts mastery for himself. It seems likely that Fu was in his
mid 20s when he took this step. There are also accounts that suggest
that Fu himself may have served as the village boxing instructor at some
points during this period.
If so, his tenure was likely to have been an eventful one. 1900 saw
widespread violence as the Yihi Boxer movement swept the countryside of
Northern China before centering its fury on the foreign presence in
Beijing. The immediate aftermath of this was more bloodshed and foreign
military raids into the countryside around Beijing as the seven powers
attempted to hunt down any remaining Boxers. Nor can we forget the
lingering effects of the famine that motivated so many young men to join
the ranks of the Yihi Boxers in the first place.
Social violence echoed throughout the countryside and Mape village
was not spared. There are accounts of Fu personally facing down a small
gang of local bandits while armed with a pole (possibly made of iron) in
1900. In another account, which Lin and Wing deem to be credible, Fu
was forced to interrupt his time in Beijing (where he was studying Bagua
with Ma Gui, a senior disciple of Yin Fu) to return to his village in
1908 where there were rumors of trouble.
In the most spectacular versions of the story Fu, discovering the
villagers massively outnumbered by a force of 300 bandits, Fu offered to
fight a duel with their top 20 men. The bandit leader was so impressed
with his subsequent victory that he broke off the assault. However,
Lin and Wing note that Fu’s own account of the events (while cryptic) is
far more realistic. When directly questioned later in life he told his
student Lin Chao Zhen “They told me there was trouble, so I grabbed a
spear and went out to face them. There were about 30 of them. I fought
them, they left.”
According to Lin and Wing, it seems likely that Fu killed two of the
raiders in a clash between roughly equal numbers of villagers and
bandits. The legal repercussions for killing someone in Imperial China
were serious, and on the dusty northern plains the line between one
village’s militia and the next’s bandit gang was paper thin. It was not
uncommon for villages militias to turn bandit and raid neighboring
settlements in times of famine, or for them to be used to settle
disputes. We don’t really know what sparked this particular clash, but
its implications were serious enough that Fu left home and he doesn’t
seem to have really returned. Instead this clash seems to mark the
beginning of a long period of martial pilgrimage that would only end
with his settlement in Guangzhou in 1928.
Banditry was a major problem in the final years of the Qing dynasty.
Successful groups could assemble forces numbering in the thousands and
occasionally tens of thousands. These bandit armies would lay siege to
small cities and challenge the authority of civil and military
authorities. Lacking other options, the state sometimes dealt with
particularly successful bandits by offering them commissions as military
officers in exchange for their services hunting down other bandit
groups or suppressing insurrection in the countryside. Like the martial
arts, banditry proved to be a pathway for social advancement for some of
China’s landless youth during volatile times.
Nor should we underestimate just how high one’s fortunes could rise.
Republic era generals Zhang Zuolin and Li Zongren were important
figures in the political history of the 1920s and 1930s. Both men also
crossed paths with Fu at various points.
Zhang and Li each began their rise to power as bandit chieftains in
some of the same areas of Northern China that Fu would explore as a
member of an armed escort company. Both men would successfully parlay
their original commissions by the Imperial military into positions of
influence, and immense personal enrichment, in the armies of the 1920s
and 1930s. During the early 20th century they would also use
their followers as “armed escort companies” when periods of relatively
peace allowed regional trade in Henan and Shandong. Fu’s formative
years occurred in decades when the line between martial artists, bandit,
soldier and armed escort/security guard were thin and ever shifting.
Indeed, these social networks would have an important shaping impact on
Fu’s own rise to prominence.
Between the years 1910 and 1913 Fu Zhen Song traveled widely,
exploring northern China. In 1910 he was hired by one of Henan’s many
armed escort companies, the Heng Xin Bio Ju. While working with them he
traveled the dangerous routes between Henan and Shandong until the firm
was ultimately forced to close by the conclusion of the revolution in
1912.
Fu continued to travel for another year, apparently seeking out
martial arts instruction. During late 1912 or 1913 he encountered noted
Daoist and swordsman Song Wei Yi (1855-1925). While he may have studied
some sword material with him, Lin and Wing report that his main aim was
to learn Taiji Lightening Palm and Rocket Fist.
During this time Fu somehow found the opportunity to marry Han Kunru,
the daughter of another martial arts teacher from Northern China. They
would eventually have four children in total, two sons and two
daughters. The elder son would go on to inherit his father’s martial
lineage, and later taught Mark Bow Sim, the mother of film star Donnie
Yen. While the younger son was not interested in martial arts, there are
accounts of both daughters assisting their father in Taijiquan
demonstrations.
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