Notes
Source Texts (原典) — the Manuals, in Order
On this page
This is the reading guide to the primary sources themselves — the actual manuals and classics this wiki is built on, arranged in the order they were written. For how we source, reproduce, and cite these texts, see the companion methodology page:
Sources & Method — the wiki's citation policy and where the original scans live
This page is the what. Read straight down, the texts tell the real story of the Chinese fighting arts assembling itself — weapons before empty hands, drill before doctrine — and show the famous legends arriving, late, in chapters of their own. Each title below has its own full page with the history, a verified passage in the original, and links to a public-domain scan.
The body-cultivation root
Before the fighting manuals comes the conditioning text that later got wrapped in the founding myth.
The age of weapons — Cheng Zongyou, 1621
Shaolin's documented fame began with arms, not fists. The soldier-scholar Cheng Zongyou (程宗猷) was the first to put the temple's weapons into print, in his collected Skills Beyond Farming (耕餘剩技).
Shaolin Staff Method (少林棍法闡宗, 1621) — the earliest surviving Shaolin manual; the staff, not the fist
The arrival of the empty hand — Xuanji, 1630s → 1784
Bare-handed Shaolin boxing enters the record only at the close of the Ming, with a real fighting monk — and survives in a Qing redaction.
The training-manual age — the Republican presses
The early twentieth century turned the arts into public textbooks — photographs, plain descriptions, mass print runs — the opposite of the guarded "secret."
The myth-makers and the historians
The same Republican decades produced both the great myth-book and the scholar who took it apart — and the contrast between them is the whole method of this wiki in miniature.
How to read them
A few habits make these texts repay the effort:
Watch the order. The dates matter more than the stories. A weapons manual in 1621 and a boxing manual that only surfaces in the 1630s tell you, by themselves, that the "ancient Bodhidharma boxing" of legend is the late arrival.
Separate the teaching from the book. Several of these (the Hand-Combat Classic above all) preserve an older teaching inside a later redaction. We try to date each layer, not collapse them.
Legend is labeled as legend. Bodhidharma and the Yijinjing, Zhang Sanfeng and the internal arts, Wang Lang and the mantis — told as the tradition's stories, kept beside the record.
The translations here are ours, released to the public domain; the original-language texts are public domain and linked to a scan on each page.
For the deep taiji classics — the Wang Zongyue Treatise, the Thirteen-Postures songs, Qi Jiguang's Classic of Pugilism, and more, each with full original text and translation — see the sister wiki at taiji.openmindspace.org.
See also
Shaolin Kung Fu — the narrative history these texts document
The Eighteen Luohan Hands — the legend the texts quietly contradict
Mantis Canon — open English translations of the Praying Mantis literature
Northern Kung Fu Styles — the living arts these manuals underlie
Details
- Section:
- Notes
- Updated:
- 2026-06-05
More in this section
- Gong Baotian (宮寶田, c. 1870–1943) — the imperial bodyguard of Yin-style Bagua
- Liu Qilan (劉奇蘭, 1819–1889) — pillar of Hebei Xingyi
- Song Shirong (宋世榮, 1849–1927) — founder of Song-style Xingyi
- Che Yizhai (車毅齋, 1833–1914) — leader of Shanxi Xingyi
- The Wang Zhengnan Epitaph (王征南墓誌銘) — Huang Zongxi, 1669
- Mantis Steals the Peach (螳螂偷桃) — Seven Star Mantis