Notes
Southern Dragon (龍形) — the floating-and-sinking wave art
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Southern Dragon (龍形, Lóngxíng; Cantonese Lung Ying) — often given in full as 龍形摩橋 ("Dragon Shape, Rubbing Bridges") — is one of the three pillars of the Hakka short-bridge arts, and the close technical cousin of Bak Mei. It takes the dragon less as a creature to imitate than as an image of power: an undulating, floating-and-sinking body that swallows and issues force in waves.
How it moves
Southern Dragon is built on continuous changes of level and a connected, rippling body:
Floating and sinking (浮沉) — the body rises and drops, light then heavy, drawing the opponent in and dropping power through him;
"Rubbing bridges" (摩橋) — close, sticky forearm contact, sensing and rolling along the opponent's bridges at short range;
Wave-like whole-body power — force generated through an undulating spine and waist rather than a static frame, the "dragon" surging through the body;
Short, upright, Hakka structure — the narrow-gate close fighting shared across the Hakka family, with phoenix-eye and clawing hands.
Lam Yiu-kwai — the documented master
The art's history runs through Lam Yiu-kwai (林耀桂, 1877–1966), a Hakka master of the East River (東江) region of Guangdong — the same heartland, and the same generation, as Bak Mei's Cheung Lai-chuen. By tradition Lam received the art from a monk at a temple on Mount Luofu (羅浮山); he then became one of the most respected teachers in Republican-era Guangzhou — reputedly instructing military and police — and carried Southern Dragon to Hong Kong, where his lineage took deep root.
That Bak Mei and Southern Dragon emerged from the same region, the same Hakka community, and the same generation — and share so much short-bridge vocabulary — is itself a useful fact: the "Hakka short-bridge family" is not a retrospective label but a real, datable cluster of closely related arts.
See also
The Hakka Short-Bridge Arts — the family Southern Dragon belongs to
Bak Mei (白眉) — its closest cousin
Southern Praying Mantis (南螳螂) — the third Hakka pillar
Sources
[1] Southern Dragon Kung Fu (Lung Ying), English Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Dragon_Kung_Fu) — the art, the floating-sinking method, and Lam Yiu-kwai's lineage.
[2] Benjamin Judkins, Kung Fu Tea / Chinese Martial Studies — context on the Hakka arts and the East River martial community.
Details
- Section:
- Notes
- Updated:
- 2026-06-06
More in this section
- The Hakka Short-Bridge Arts (客家拳) — the close-range family
- Bak Mei (白眉) — "White Eyebrow," the explosive short-power art
- Cheung Lai-chuen (張禮泉, 1882–1964) — the maker of modern Bak Mei
- Southern Praying Mantis (南螳螂) — the Hakka mantis
- The Fujian Arts (福建) — the crane family and the road to Okinawa
- Fujian White Crane (白鶴拳) — the shaking-power crane art