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Chuojiao + Fanzi (戳腳翻子)

Updated 2026-06-05
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Chuojiao (戳腳, "poking feet") and Fanzi (翻子, "tumbling fist") are two distinct northern arts that are nearly always trained together as the paired system 戳腳翻子Chuojiao supplying the legwork, Fanzi the hands. Together they form one of the most distinctive northern fighting expressions: dense, low, fast, continuous, percussive — a flurry of kicks and rolling short blows with no pause for the opponent to recover.

Chuojiao (戳腳) — "poking feet"

A kicking-centered art from Hebei (especially Li County 蠡縣 / 饒陽). The signature is mandarin-duck kicks (鴛鴦腿) — paired low fast kicks that chain into each other and into the hands. "Nine-rotation mandarin-duck legs" (九轉鴛鴦腳) is the classical formula.

  • Stances stay low and rooted.

  • Kicks are short, fast, and chained — not the high single kicks of competition wushu; the body stays close to the ground so the kicks arrive without telegraph.

  • Two stylistic streams: 文趟子 ("civil road") — smoother, more linked; 武趟子 ("martial road") — sharper, with more pronounced stamps.

  • Closely associated with 王占春 Wang Zhanchun of Hebei in the 19th century and with the Hu Family (胡氏) transmission.

Fanzi (翻子) — "tumbling fist"

A hand-centered art of dense, rolling, continuous short blows"two fists like rain, every strike inseparable from the body" (雙拳密如雨, 著著不離身). Compact, percussive, and built for rapid sequences rather than single decisive strikes.

  • Signature form: 八閃翻 (Eight-Flash Tumbling) — the classical core set.

  • Other named sets: 大翻車, 小翻車, 鷹爪翻子 (Eagle-Claw Fanzi — a closely-related sub-system with gripping techniques).

  • Hebei is again the heartland (centered on Cangzhou and Baoding regions).

Together: 戳腳翻子

In practice, Chuojiao and Fanzi are paired so the legs and hands cover each other — Chuojiao's fast low kicks open the line, Fanzi's dense short hands finish. The combined system trains:

  • 戳腳基本功 (Chuojiao basics) — leg conditioning, kick drills, low stance work.

  • 翻子單操 (Fanzi single-strike drills) — the rolling short blows in repetition.

  • The combined sets and applications.

Primary sources

This is a documented gap in the open record — among the Northern arts, Chuojiao and Fanzi are the most under-served by free primary sources. Future hunting target: the smaller Hebei regional libraries and the lineage archives in Li County and Cangzhou. The modern books by 佟慶輝 (Tong Qinghui) and the Beijing wushu series are the standard in-copyright references.

Video

See also

Northern Kung Fu Styles — Chuojiao + Fanzi in the broader Northern canon

Sources

[1] Chuojiao, Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org) — Hebei roots, 鴛鴦腿 signature, civil/martial road distinction.

[2] Fanziquan, Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org) — 八閃翻 signature form, Hebei heartland.

[3] 北拳匯編 (Republican, anon.) — held in the codex as the only PD source touching both arts.