Huo Yuanjia (Chinese:霍元甲) (c.1867-1910chinwoo.org.cn states that the Chin Woo association was founded on July 7, 1910. An interview with Huo Yuanjia's great-grandson states that he died about 70 days after the Chin Woo school was founded. However, chinwoo.com states August 1909 as the date of death.) was a Chinese martial artist and founder of the Chin Woo Athletic Association, a martial arts school in Shanghai.. A practitioner of the martial art Mízōng, he is considered a hero in China for challenging foreign fighters in highly publicized matches at a time when Chinese sovereignty was being eroded by foreign concessions and spheres of influence.
Huo is well-known for his challenge matches with foreign fighters. It was a 1901 encounter with a Russian wrestler in Xiyuan Park, Tianjin that first made Huo famous. The wrestler had openly insulted the Chinese, calling them "Asian weaklings" or "Sick Man Of the East" because no one would accept his challenge to a fight. When Huo challenged him, the Russian forfeited, suggesting that he was merely putting on a performance in order to make a living. Huo then demanded that the Russian write an apology in the newspaper, which the Russian reportedly obliged.An interview with Huo Zizheng, Huo Yuanjia's great-grandson. 2006.
In 1909, Huo, accompanied by his apprentices Liu Zhensheng and Zhang Wenda, traveled to Shanghai to accept an open challenge posed by a British boxer named Hercules O'Brien. The match was preceded by disagreement over what rules it would be governed by. O'Brien insisted on Western boxing rules limiting attacks to punches above the waist. Huo, on the other hand, was more accustomed to the rules of Chinese leitai challenge matches, which lacked such restrictions. They finally agreed that the first person to knock down his opponent would be considered the winner; however, the match never took place and Hercules O'Brien fled the area before the date of the match.
In 1910, Huo opened the Chin Woo Athletic Association (精武体操会), a martial arts school at Shanghai's north gate. According to Huo's grandson, Huo's death came after the defeat of the 10 members of the Japanese Judo team. During a subsequent dinner with his opponents, Huo's illness (perhaps tuberculosis) prompted the Japanese to offer medical help, but he suffered a severe and fatal reaction to the medication given by the Japanese doctor. Huo died approximately 70 days after the founding of the Chin Woo association. It is often alleged that his death was caused by being poisoned by the Japanese, an allegation repeated by Huo's offspring.
1868 births | 1910 deaths | Martial arts school founders | My Jhong Law Horn practitioners
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Huo Yuanjia".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world