A new publication about Wushu written in Spanish, English, Chinese Mandarin and Pinyin. Una nueva publicación sobre el Wushu escrita en Español, Inglés, Chino Mandarín y Pinyin
This is a preview of the 100 Esential Techniques of Wushu developed by Armando Alvarado (wushusinfrontera.com). This book is written in English, Spanish, Chinese and Pinyin. Esta es una vista previa de las 100 Técnicas Esenciales de Wushu desarrollado por Armando Alvarado (wushusinfrontera.com) Este libro está escrito en español, inglés, chino mandarin y pinyin.
Guan Yu (160 – 219) fue un general de la milicia bajo el mando de Liu Bei durante la dinastía Han tardía del este y el período de los tres reinos de la antigua China.
Uno de los mejores guerreros de los tres reinos. Bien preparado en la administración y preparación tanto de ciudades como de ejércitos. Un gran maestro en la caballería y prácticamente fue reconocido con el mote de “Dios de la Guerra”. Fue leal hasta la muerte a sus dos hermanos con los que, en el rosa jardín de melocotones, había jurado:
“Aunque nacidos en días distintos juramos morir juntos en el mismo día del mismo mes del mismo año.” more…
A guandao kwandao or kuantao is a type of Chinese pole weapon that is currently used in some forms of Chinese martial arts. In Chinese it is properly called a 偃月刀 yan yue dao (”reclining moon blade”), the name under which it always appears in texts from the Song to Qing dynasties such as the Wujing Zongyao and Huangchao Liqi Tushi. It is comparable to a European fauchard and consists of a heavy blade with a spike at the back and sometimes also a notch at the spike’s upper base that can catch an opponent’s weapon. In addition there are often irregular serrations that lead the back edge of the blade to the spike.
The blade is mounted atop a 1.5 m to 1.8 m (5-6 foot) long wooden or metal pole with a pointed metal counter weight used to balance the heavy blade and for striking on the opposite end. The blade is very deeply curved and therefore unlike most polearms, solely useful for sweeping cuts where it relies on range and power.
On modern versions, a red sash or tassel is attached at the joint of the pole and blade. Variations include having rings along the length of the straight back edge as found in the nine-ring guan dao, having the tip curl into a rounded spiral as in the elephant guan dao (literally Elephant Knife”, or featuring a more ornate design as exemplified by the Dragon head guan dao. However, apart from the “Elephant knife” none of these variations seem to have historical ground.