For anyone interested in a more detailed history of the Northern Shaolin Temple, and the Shaolin Boxing tradition of the Shang family, I would strongly recommend reading this excellent article by Sifu John Barbary. translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Ffatsanpakmeikune.blogspot.com%2F2020%2F11%2Fbei-shaolin-si-de-tianjin-le-temple.html%3Fm%3D1%26fbclid%3DIwAR0aOmyVGLKPemd6AW8yizf0CQ19kYtnqhoahGgmYG37VUGidvsXuDGZe0Y
Nope, no idea. Dao Pai is just a term used for schools that claim to have originated from or been passed on by Daoists. But it seems to be more of a modern thing. I haven't seen any evidence of the term Dao Pai being used by martial lineages prior to the 20th century. No idea what you are talking about with Shaolin Shen Quan either. The term Shen Quan "Spirit Boxing" was widely spread and often used to describe various schools for various reasons. I have heard it used to describe some village arts in Henan which may have some tenuous links to Shaolin or have some Shaolin influence. But no idea what Shaolin Shen Quan is. But often the term Shen Quan was used as a descriptor or alternate name for schools better known by other titles. A lot of, but by no means all of, the schools that sometimes were referred to as "Shen Quan" were practiced by or somehow linked to adherents of local syncretic folk cults. Generally more of the quick spreading popular incense burning society types as opposed to something like older local temple based cults. But it can also just be a way of saying a style has "magical" or miraculous (ie not literally magical but more in the modern advertising "our product cleans your dishes like magic" or "this product is a miracle for cleaning stuck on grease" sort of way) techniques. It could also refer to some type of claimed divine inspiration. As in claims in the styles mythology that it was literally taught or inspired by gods or spirits. So both of those terms are kind of vague and widespread. Although as mentioned the Dao Pai title is something that seems to have mostly come into use in the 20th century. Where the Shen Quan title is something older and widely used during the Qing dynasty.
@@muzankibutsuji-ro7ck I forgot to mention that sometimes the term Shen Quan is used to describe practices of martially focused spirit possession. So it's a pretty widely spread nebulous term. Although it's kind of fallen out of popularity since the end of the Qing.
For anyone interested in a more detailed history of the Northern Shaolin Temple, and the Shaolin Boxing tradition of the Shang family, I would strongly recommend reading this excellent article by Sifu John Barbary.
translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Ffatsanpakmeikune.blogspot.com%2F2020%2F11%2Fbei-shaolin-si-de-tianjin-le-temple.html%3Fm%3D1%26fbclid%3DIwAR0aOmyVGLKPemd6AW8yizf0CQ19kYtnqhoahGgmYG37VUGidvsXuDGZe0Y
Thank you!
Tan Tui. Spring Legs. Haven't seen that in a long time. Thank you.
Esto demuestra como muchas formas de shaolin son nuevas ya que la.mayoria de los estilos antiguos de shaolin son muy similares entre si
Any heard of Dao pai and Shaolin shen quan styles?
Any history
Nope, no idea.
Dao Pai is just a term used for schools that claim to have originated from or been passed on by Daoists.
But it seems to be more of a modern thing.
I haven't seen any evidence of the term Dao Pai being used by martial lineages prior to the 20th century.
No idea what you are talking about with Shaolin Shen Quan either.
The term Shen Quan "Spirit Boxing" was widely spread and often used to describe various schools for various reasons.
I have heard it used to describe some village arts in Henan which may have some tenuous links to Shaolin or have some Shaolin influence.
But no idea what Shaolin Shen Quan is.
But often the term Shen Quan was used as a descriptor or alternate name for schools better known by other titles.
A lot of, but by no means all of, the schools that sometimes were referred to as "Shen Quan" were practiced by or somehow linked to adherents of local syncretic folk cults. Generally more of the quick spreading popular incense burning society types as opposed to something like older local temple based cults.
But it can also just be a way of saying a style has "magical" or miraculous (ie not literally magical but more in the modern advertising "our product cleans your dishes like magic" or "this product is a miracle for cleaning stuck on grease" sort of way) techniques. It could also refer to some type of claimed divine inspiration. As in claims in the styles mythology that it was literally taught or inspired by gods or spirits.
So both of those terms are kind of vague and widespread.
Although as mentioned the Dao Pai title is something that seems to have mostly come into use in the 20th century. Where the Shen Quan title is something older and widely used during the Qing dynasty.
@@muzankibutsuji-ro7ck I forgot to mention that sometimes the term Shen Quan is used to describe practices of martially focused spirit possession.
So it's a pretty widely spread nebulous term. Although it's kind of fallen out of popularity since the end of the Qing.