Notes
Guo Yunshen (郭雲深, c. 1820–1900) — "Half-step Beng Quan beats all under heaven"
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Guo Yunshen (郭雲深 / Guō Yúnshēn, c. 1820–1900) was the most celebrated disciple of Li Luoneng and the Xingyi master whose boast became the art's most famous line: 半步崩拳打遍天下 — "with half a step of Crushing Fist, beat all under heaven." The teacher of Wang Xiangzhai (founder of Yiquan) and a key source for Sun Lutang's written record of Xingyi doctrine, Guo stands at the center of the Hebei branch.
Life
Born in 深縣 Shen County, Hebei — the same county as his teacher Li Luoneng. Guo became Li's disciple and devoted himself with unusual single-mindedness to one technique above all: 崩拳 (Beng Quan, "Crushing Fist"), driven by the short 半步 (half-step) advance.
What he gave the art
The half-step Crushing Fist as the model of Xingyi's directness — short, blunt, decisive, arriving with the step.
The theory of the three levels of power — 明勁 (ming jin, "obvious power"), 暗勁 (an jin, "hidden power"), 化勁 (hua jin, "transforming power") — the developmental ladder of Xingyi force, articulated by Guo and recorded for posterity in Sun Lutang's 拳意述真 (1923), which preserves Guo's teaching in writing.
三體式 (santi shi) standing as the indispensable root — a discipline Guo is said to have held to the point of legend.
The lineage that descends from him
王薌齋 (Wang Xiangzhai) — Guo's late-life student, who distilled Xingyi's standing-and-intent core into a new art, 意拳 / 大成拳 (Yiquan / Dachengquan).
李奎垣 (Li Kuiyuan) — through whom Sun Lutang entered Guo's Xingyi line before studying with Guo directly; Sun's 形意拳學 (1915) and 拳意述真 (1923) carry the doctrine forward in print.
A wide Hebei following that, with Liu Qilan's line, made Hebei Xingyi the most disseminated branch in the world.
See also
Xingyi (形意拳) — the full style overview
Li Luoneng (李洛能) — Guo's teacher, the founder of Xingyiquan
Sun Lutang (孫祿堂) — carried Guo's line into print; recorded his teaching in 拳意述真
Internal vs External — Xingyi's classification as 內家
A Short History of Chinese Martial Arts
Sources
[1] Guo Yunshen, Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guo_Yunshen) and the Chinese Wikipedia counterpart — biography, the half-step Beng Quan, the prison tradition, the lineage to Wang Xiangzhai and Sun Lutang.
[2] 孫祿堂 拳意述真 (1923) — preserves Guo Yunshen's teaching, including the three levels of power, in Sun Lutang's record. Held in the codex's Sources/internal-arts-manuals/.
[3] 孫祿堂 形意拳學 (1915) — the foundational printed Xingyi treatise from the same lineage.
Details
- Section:
- Notes
- Updated:
- 2026-06-05
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Related pages
- Liu Qilan (劉奇蘭, 1819–1889) — pillar of Hebei Xingyi
- Cheng Tinghua (程廷華, 1848–1900) — Glasses Cheng
- Yin Fu (尹福, 1840–1909) — the senior disciple, "Thin Yin"
- Che Yizhai (車毅齋, 1833–1914) — leader of Shanxi Xingyi
- Wang Xiangzhai (王薌齋, c. 1885–1963) — the man who threw out the forms
- Wong Hon Fan (黃漢勛, 1915–1974)