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Chinese swordsmanship encompasses a variety of sword fighting styles native to China. No Chinese system teaches swordsmanship exclusively (as is the case with modern sports such as fencing or kendo), but many eclectic schools of Chinese martial arts include instruction for using one or two-handed versions of the single-edged sword (dao) and the double-edged sword (jian).[1]
Many Chinese martial arts styles teach swordsmanship. Wudang Sword is an umbrella term for all sword styles taught in the Wudang chuan family of martial arts. Taijijian is the swordsmanship taught within Taijiquan.
Shuangdao (simplified Chinese: 双刀; traditional Chinese: 雙刀) is the Chinese term for the wielding of two dao simultaneously.
References edit
- ^ Fei, M; Xin, X (2023). "A Preliminary Study on Developing and Inheriting the Culture of Chinese Martial Arts Soldiers". Journal of Namibian Studies : History Politics Culture. 33: 3469–3487.
See also edit
Sources edit
- Zhang Yun, The Complete Taiji Dao: The Art of the Chinese Saber, Blue Snake Books, ISBN 978-1-58394-227-7
- Zhang Yun, Art Of Chinese Swordsmanship: Manual Of Taiji Jian, Weatherhill, ISBN 978-0-8348-0412-8