: ''This article is about the closely related Lama Pai, Hop Gar, and Tibetan White Crane styles of martial arts. For the Fujianese style of White Crane, see
Fujian White Crane (martial art).''
The closely related
martial arts 'Lama Pai', 'Tibetan White Crane', and 'Hop Gar' have their most recent common ancestor in a martial art called 'Lion's Roar' and a
Tibetan monk,
Sing Lung, who in
1865 relocated to
Guangdong Province, to the Green Cloud Monastery.
Though Sing Lung had many students, his legacy was handed down to the present day primarily through two of them:
Wong Yan-Lam and
Wong Lam-Hoi.
; Tibetan White Crane : The name "Tibetan White Crane" is associated with the lineage passed down from Wong Lam-Hoi through Ng Siu-Chung, whose training with Wong was later supplemented by training with Chu Chi-Yiu, another of Sing Lung's students.
; Lama Pai : The name "Lama Pai" is associated with the lineage passed down from Wong Yan-Lam through
Jyu Chyuhn and Choi Yit-Gung, two of his later students.
; Hop Gar : The name "Hop Gar" is, with the exception of Harry Ng Yim-Ming, associated with the lineage passed down through Wong Yan-Lam's earlier students, especially Wong Hon-Wing.
The original Lion's Roar system is attributed to a monk named Ādátuó (阿達陀), said to have been born in
1426 to a tribe known for its horsemanship and for its
joint-locking techniques.
Ādátuó also received training in wrestling including, after his ordination, a style called "Dinah" from an old man from Tala.
Ādátuó eventually decided to become a hermit in the mountains so that he could follow the
dharma without distraction.
One day by the side of a pond, his meditation was interrupted by a fight between an ape and a crane.
Inspired, Ādátuó devised a style that incorporated both the ape's powerful swinging motions and the crane's evasiveness and precision strikes to vulnerable points.
According to the White Crane (Pak Hok) Athletic Federation in
Hong Kong, the style was developed secretively in
Tibet during the
Ming Dynasty (
1368–
1644).
Even though Lion's Roar traces its origins to Tibet and its descendant styles are nowadays practiced mainly in the Southern Chinese province of Guangdong, these styles are consistent with the martial arts of Northern China.
White
Crane style is very well known in
Chinese martial arts circles, emphasizing high steps, sweeping diversions of attacks with the arms for defense and high kicks and strikes with the elbows, fingers (in the form of 'the crane's beak') and wrists for offense.
Lama Pai oral history maintains that, in the late
Ming Dynasty (
1368–
1644), Lion's Roar spread to Northern China and incorporated the techniques of the martial arts there, explaining its Northern Chinese characteristics.
In some ways, Lama Pai, Tibetan White Crane, and Hop Gar take the distinguishing characteristics of Northern Chinese martial arts (fully extended arms, mobility, high kicks) even further than those arts themselves do and may be a source of the Northern characteristics found in the Southern Chinese martial arts of Guangdong.
Wang Yan-Lam was the eldest of the
Ten Tigers of Canton, a group of ten of the top martial arts masters in Guangdong towards the end of the
Qing Dynasty (
1644–
1912).
One of his fellow Tigers was
Wong Kei-Ying, father of the famous
Wong Fei-Hung.
Father and son, both masters of
Hung Kuen, exchanged knowledge with other martial artists, including Wong Yan-Lam, which would explain why the crane techniques of their Hung Kuen lineage—which emphasize one-legged stances, kicks, and the crane's beak hand formation—are closer to Tibetan White Crane than to Hung Kuen Crane's supposed roots in
Fujian White Crane, whose
isometric exercises and firmly rooted, pigeon-toed stances show greater affinity with the Kiu Sau exercises and Iron Wire Fist of Hung Kuen than with its crane techniques.
According to Lama Pai oral history, Wong Fei-Hung learned from Wong Yan-Lam the long arm techniques found in the Tiger Crane Paired Form Fist and the
Five Element techniques found in the Five Animal Five Element Fist in return for the Five Animal techniques found in the Small Five Animal Fist of Yan-Lam and his descendants.
By contrast, "village" styles of Hung Kuen do not show signs of influence from Lama Pai/Hop Gar/Tibetan White Crane and are more characteristic of Southern Chinese martial arts.
Tibetan White Crane
Ng Siu-Chung trained with Ng Siu-Chan in addition to Wong Lam-Hoi and Chu Chi-Yiu. Ng Siu-Chung and Ng Siu-Chan in turn taught Au Wing-Lin.
Lama Pai
Jyu Chyuhn trained with Wong Lam-Hoi in addition to Wong Yan-Lam. He taught
Chan Tai-San.
External links
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Lamakungfu.org
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Tibetan White Crane/Hop Gar/Lama Pai Lineage Charts
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Indo-Tibetan Lion's Roar Martial Arts
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White Crane Kung Fu - NYC
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Pak Hok Pai - White Crane Kung Fu - Australia