The Shaolin Monastery. History, Religion and the Chinese Martial Arts

(Frankie) #1

  1. Hanshu, 3 0.1761, 63. 276 0, 81. 333 6 , a nd 87. 3557. S ee a l so M a M i ngd a , Shuo jian
    cong gao, pp. 46 –67; and Zhou Weiliang, Zhongguo wushu shi, pp. 21–22. During the
    Han period, several wrestling forms called juedi (later known as xiangpu) were also
    practiced. Some apparently resembled modern Japanese sumo. See Zhou Weiliang,
    Zhongguo wushu shi, pp. 19–21, 31–33; and Cheng Dali, Zhongguo wushu, pp. 189–194.

  2. The sentence is replete with Daoist technical terms for meditation: mingxin
    means clearing the mind of all thoughts; wogu means clenching the fist, usually by
    pressing the thumb against the middle finger’s middle section, then wrapping it with
    the other fingers; jingsi is quiet visualization. See Zhonghua Daojiao da cidian, pp. 980
    and 983 respectively. On wogu, see also Engelhardt, “Longevity Techniques and Chi-
    nese Medicine,” p. 103.

  3. Daoist cosmology identifies the head with the immortals’ abode atop Mt.
    Kunlun in northwest China.

  4. Neigong tushuo, pp. 8–12. My translation partially follows Dudgeon’s (“Kung-
    fu or Medical Gymnastics,” pp. 375–385) rendition of the set’s source, The Eight-
    Exercises Brocade.

  5. Neigong tushuo, p. 6.

  6. Zeng Zao (fl. 1131–1155), Dao shu; Schipper, ed. Concordance du Tao-tsang
    (hereafter “DZ”), 1017, 35.17a (Zeng Zao, however, does not mention the name
    “Eight-Section Brocade”). See also Tang Hao et al., Baduan jin, p. 2; and Zhongguo
    gudai tiyu shi, p. 347.

  7. Hong Mai, Yijian zhi, section yi, 9.65–66.

  8. See Tang Hao et al., Baduan jin; and Chen Pengcheng and Feng Wu, “The
    Eight-Section Brocade.” Contemporary Shaolin “Eight-Section Brocade” is out-
    lined in Chuantong Shaolin quan taolu jiaocheng, 5:296 –308.

  9. See Gao Lian, Zunsheng bajian, 10.18b–22b, trans. Dudgeon, “Kung-fu or
    Medical Gymnastics,” pp. 375–385; Chifeng sui, 1.45 –56, trans. Despeux, La moelle
    du phénix rouge, pp. 112–126; and Xiuzhen shishu, DZ, 263, 19.1a–5b. On the Shou shi
    chuan zhen (which I have not seen), see Tang Hao, “Songshan Shaolin chuanxi de
    he huiji de ticao,” pp. 26 –27; and Tang Hao, “Wo Guo tiyu ziliao jieti,” pp. 65–67.

  10. The exercises are attributed to Zhongli Quan in Xiuzhen shishu, DZ, 263,
    19.1a. Zeng Zao (fl. 1131–1155) alludes to Lü Dongbin in a comment that is included
    in the same work (23.1b): “Master Zhongli’s ‘Eight-Section Brocade’ was written on a
    stone wall by the hand of Sir Lü [Dongbin]; thus were they passed on to the world.”
    See Maspero, “Methods of ‘Nourishing the Vital Principle,’” p. 547, note 16. On the
    literary corpus attributed to the two immortals see Predagio and Skar, “Inner Al-
    chemy,” p. 469.

  11. Neigong tushuo, pp. 47–70, and Dudgeon’s translation (which was made
    from the Weisheng Yijin jing (1875)), pp. 529 –541. On the Weisheng Yijin jing, see ap-
    pendix, edition no. 4.
    7 8. See Prip-Møller, Chinese Buddhist Monasteries, p. 30, p. 34, plate 38. The
    mistranscription is Weituo instead of (Sai) Jiantuo for Skanda; see Noël Peri, “Le
    dieu Wei-t’ouo”; and Strickmann, Chinese Magical Medicine, pp. 218–227. See also
    Stein, “The Guardian of the Gate.”


230 Notes to Pages 157–161

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