Ji's Tai Chi

Beijing
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Ji's Tai Chi is a set of internal boxing techniques specially designed for the "Buku" (wrestlers) of the late Qing Dynasty's royal Shanpu Camp. It is the product of the Shanpu Camp Buku absorbing the internal boxing techniques of Tai Chi and organically combining them with the inherent Manchu wrestling techniques. It has been passed down through three generations and has a history of more than 120 years. The Ji's Tai Chi has a full set of 108 movements, and the overall requirements are "central, upright and comfortable", "concentrated mind and intention", "loose and natural", "soft, slow and agile", "continuous", and "smooth and flexible". It embodies the true meaning of the so-called "Bashi wrestling" in old Beijing and the practical characteristics of Shanpu Camp wrestling, "wrestling close and hitting far away" and "equal emphasis on wrestling and hitting". Information source: District Cultural Committee Information source: District Cultural Committee

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