Notes
What is Kung Fu? (功夫 / 中國武術)
On this page
Kung fu (功夫, gōngfu; also spelled gong fu or kungfu) is the everyday English name for Chinese martial arts — the vast family of fighting, health, and self-cultivation systems developed across China over many centuries. In China the arts are more often called wushu (武術, "martial arts"), guoshu (國術, "national art"), or simply quan (拳, "boxing / fist").
Strictly, gongfu means skill achieved through sustained effort and time — it can describe a master calligrapher or cook as readily as a boxer. The martial meaning is the one that traveled the world through twentieth-century cinema.
Internal (內家) and external (外家)
A traditional — if blurry — split:
Internal arts (內家) lead with intention (意), breath, sinking, and whole-body connection; power is issued from a relaxed, integrated body. The classic three are Taiji 太極, Bagua 八卦掌, and Xingyi 形意拳.
External arts (外家) lead with conditioned structure, speed, and percussive power, trained from the frame outward. Most Shaolin-derived and regional folk styles sit here.
The line is porous: Baji and Pigua are "hard" yet deeply mechanical, and Praying Mantis has soft, internal branches.
Northern (北) and Southern (南)
A second axis, roughly north vs south of the Yangtze:
Northern (北派) — longer stances, expansive footwork, kicks, leaps, long-range entries. Mantis, Bagua, Xingyi, Baji, Cha, Tongbei, Northern Shaolin.
Southern (南派) — rooted stances, compact powerful hands, bridge-arm work. Hung Ga, Wing Chun, Choy Li Fut, Southern White Crane.
Northern Kung Fu Styles — our first field guide
The major families
Chinese martial arts number in the hundreds of named systems. A few you'll meet often: Shaolin 少林, Taiji 太極, Bagua 八卦掌, Xingyi 形意, Baji 八極, Praying Mantis 螳螂, Wing Chun 詠春, Hung Ga 洪拳, and Tan Tui 彈腿 — the foundational kicking drill-set behind many northern schools.
Legend versus history
Many styles carry romantic origin myths — a wandering Daoist, an animal observed in a courtyard, a secret temple manual. These are part of the culture and worth knowing, but we treat them as legend, not documented history, and say so on each page.
Details
- Section:
- Notes
- Updated:
- 2026-06-04