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The
history of Tang Soo Do dates back some 2,000 years, and is based upon
techniques adopted from Chinese warriors of the T’ang Dynasty
(618-906 A.D.). These techniques were then merged with native
Korean fighting arts, such as Soo Bahk Ki, Tae Kyon, and
the suite of military skills known as Kwon Bup. However,
modern Tang Soo Do bears little resemblance to these ancient fighting
systems.
Tang Soo Do
literally means “China Hand Way” (Tang referring to the T'ang
Dynasty mentioned above) which was once used to refer to a broad
group of techniques which were taught by various kwans (martial
arts schools) in Korea. These techniques were based upon techniques
which came from T’ang Dynasty in China, and were also influenced by
Okinawan and Japanese fighting systems. In its modern use however,
the term Tang Soo Do has come to refer to the style of one particular
martial arts school in Korea, known as the Moo Duk Kwan
(House/School of Martial Virtue).
The more ancient history of Tang Soo Do
dates back to the period of the “Three Kingdoms”(57B.C.-935
A.D.). During this time, the Korean peninsula and part of what is now
China was divided into three separate kingdoms. These were:
Koguryo (37B.C.-668 A.D.),Baek-Je (18 B.C.-660 A.D.),and
Silla (57 B.C.-935A.D.). Through out their development each of
nation had periods of war and peace with each other and their other
Asian neighbor. In the 7th Century, the Silla began to
grow in power, and had established a powerful fighting force known as
the Hwa Rang (Flowering Youth), a group of young, aristocratic
warriors.
During this time in
China,
the T’ang rose to power and overthrew the Sui Dynasty (589-618
A.D.). The T’ang Dynasty was instrumental in the development of the
martial arts in China. Many martial arts theories, rituals, and
techniques were developed during this time. It was during this time
that early forms of Tae Geuk Kwon (Tai Chi Ch’uan) were being
developed, and the monks of the So Rim (Shaolin) temple were
beginning to craft their famous fighting systems. Many believe these
early fighting systems grew out of exercises brought to China from
India by a Buddhist priest called Dal Ma Dai Sa (Bodhidharma).
Many modern scholars, however, dismiss this as mere myth.
The Silla formed an alliance with T’ang
China, and conquered Baek-Je and Koguryo, uniting the Korean peninsula
for the first time in 668 A.D. and began the Silla Dynasty
(668-935 A.D.). The Hwa Rang warriors of the Silla Dynasty mastered
many of the fighting techniques of the T’ang armies, and combined
these techniques with the indigenous fighting systems of ancient
Korea. These were sometimes referred to as Tang Soo Ki (Tang
Hand Techniques). A monk named Won Kwa created a set of
ethical precepts derived from Confucian principles, which the Hwa Rang
used as a "warrior's code. These principles passed down generation to
generation, and are represented today in the Tang Soo Do Sae Sok Oh
Kyae (Five Codes of Tang Soo Do).
In 935 A.D., Silla surrendered to the
Koryo nation, forming the Koryo Dynasty (935-1392 A.D.). At
this time in China, the T’ang fell to the Sung rule in 906 A.D. The
Sung Dynasty held tremendous influence over all cultural development
in asia, including the martial development in Koryo. The Koreans
began to refer to their indigenous fighting systems as Soo Bahk Ki
(Hand Striking Techniques), while the Chinese arts were referred to as
Kwon Bup (Fist Method). Koryo lasted until 1392 when it was
overthrown by General Yi Song Kee, and the last dynasty of
Korea, known as the Chosun or Yi Dynasty (1392-1910) was
created.
During
the Chosun Dynasty, by order of the Emperor, Lee Duk Moo
compiled the first known comprehensive text of Korean martial arts,
known as the Moo Ye Dobo Tong Ji (Illustrated Manual of Martial
Arts). This is one of the oldest surviving texts documenting ancient
Korean martial arts. Toward the end of the Yi Dynasty, a fighting
style known as Tae Kyon was developed, emphasizing many of the
kicking techniques common in many modern Korean martial arts.
In 1910, the Japanese invaded the
Korean peninsula as part of its imperial expansion into Asia. From
1910-1945, the Japanese occupied Korea exerting a tremendous amount of
control over virtually all aspects of Korean culture. During the
occupation, the practice of Korean martial arts was banned. The
Koreans were only allowed to practice Japanese martial arts. Many
Koreans traveled to Japan to study Japanese Karate, and brought Karate
back to Korea. Karate, means “Empty Hand”, in the modern
translation which is a homonym for an older term which meant "China
Hand", is a generic term used to describe the empty hand fighting
systems developed in Okinawa based upon fighting techniques of the
T’ang Dynasty in China. Japan was later introduced to Karate by
Funakoshi Gichen, founder of Shotokan, performed a
demonstration before the Japanese Emperor. These fighting arts were
originally known by the Okinawans as “To-te” (China Hand), or
simply “Te”.
The founder of Moo Duk Kwan, Hwang
Kee was born during this era of strict Japanese control, on
November 9th, 1914. Hwang was born Hwang Tae Nam, son of Yi
Dynasty scholar Hwang Yong Hwan. Hwang’s first exposure to
martial arts occurred at the age of seven, when he observed a tavern
keeper defend himself against several young ruffians. He overheard
several witnesses describing the techniques that the man used as being
Tae Kyon. Hwang Kee was so impressed by the performance, that he
sought out the tavern keeper and asked him to become his teacher.
Hwang was turned away because his young age. Hwang was not easily
discouraged and found a vantage point on a hilltop from where he could
see into the man’s courtyard and observe his practice. There, Hwang
imitated the man’s various movements. It is not clear how long Hwang
actually maintained this practice regimen, how much, or how
effectively he may have learned martial arts skills with this method.
This was Hwang’s only martial arts training until he was in his early
20’s.
Hwang Kee had a strong desire to have a
formal teacher, and to formally study traditional martial arts.
However, this was difficult due to the restrictions put in place by
the Japanese during the occupation. In 1935, after graduating from
high school, Hwang traveled to Manchuria and found employment with
the railroad. In May of 1936, while working at the Chao Yang
Ch’uan Railway Station in Manchuria, Hwang met a Chinese martial
arts master whom he referred to as Yang Kuk Jin. Some
believe that this may have been Yang Zhen-Gou (Yang Jeng-Kou),
of the famous Yang family of Tai Chi Ch’uan. Under the guidance of
Yang, Hwang Kee studied DhamDoi Sip E Ro (12 Step Springing
Legs), and Tae Geuk Kwon (Grand Supreme Fist). Hwang stayed in
Manchuria until 1937, when he returned to Seoul. Hwang Kee returned
to China only once more, in 1940, to again train with his Master Yang
for three months. Hwang never saw or spoke with Master Yang again
after that last training session.
Hwang Kee had his first exposure to the
Japanese style Karate Do (called Tang Soo Do in Korean) forms in 1939,
when he found Japanese texts on Okinawan Karate while studying in the
library of the Cho Sun Railway Bureau. Hwang Kee eventually
added the forms that he had studied from these textbooks into his
particular version of Tang Soo Do, and refined them encountered other
Koreans who had studied Karate in Japan.
On November 9, 1945, Hwang Kee opened
his first Moo Duk Kwan Dojang (Training Hall) in a space
located at the Ministry of Transportation in Yong San Gu
(Dragon Mountain District). He called his art Hwa Soo Do
(Flowering Hand Way), in reference to the Hwa Rang warriors of ancient
Korea. His teachings were based primarily upon the Chinese techniques
that he had learned from Master Yang. Hwang’s initial attempts to
open a school were unsuccessful, his first two groups of students all
eventually quit. The Koreans, having lived under Japanese rule for 35
years, were not familiar with non-Japanese martial arts, and
therefore, Hwang had a difficult time both attracting and retaining
students.
In 1946, Hwang Kee meting with two
Koreans who had both earned dan (black belt) rank while
studying in Japan, and who both operated schools that taught versions
of Japanese Karate. These instructors were Chun Sang Sup of the Yeon
Moo Kwan, and Lee Won Kuk of the Chung Do Kwan. Impressed by the
success of these two masters, Hwang Kee began to rethink his
approach.
In 1947, Hwang Kee made one last final
attempt to open the Moo Duk Kwan, this time he offered a blend of
Chinese and Japanese techniques, and used the more familiar Japanese/Okinawan
style forms. In addition, Hwang began to call his art as Tang Soo Do
(China Hand Way), a term coined by Lee Won Kuk. This name was more
familiar to the Korean people, being the Korean pronunciation of the
characters for the term “To-te”. With these changes in place, the Moo
Duk Kwan began to experience success.
Hwang Kee discovered the Moo Ye Dobo
Tong Ji (Illustrated Manual of Martial Arts), in 1957, at the
National Library in Seoul, Korea. Based upon references within the
text, Hwang began to use the pseudonym Soo Bahk Do (Hand
Fighting Way) along with Tang Soo Do to refer to his art. The two
names were used interchangeably until 1995, when Hwang officially
dropped the Tang Soo Do name in favor of Soo Bahk Do.
In 1945 when
Korea was liberated from the Japanese at the end of World War II,
several Korean martial arts schools, known as “kwans” began to
emerge. In the beginning, there were five kwans: (1) Chung Do
Kwan, founded by Lee Won Kuk, (2) Moo Duk Kwan,
founded by Hwang Kee, (3) Yeon Moo Kwan (later changed
to Ji Do Kwan), founded by Chun Sang Sup, (4) Chang
Moo Kwan, founded by Yun Byong In, and (5) Song Moo Kwan,
founded by No Byong Jik. Rivalries and political infighting
eventually developed among several of the kwans during the years of
internal instability following the Korean War (1950-1953). On April
11, 1955, a conference of several of the kwan leaders and prominent
martial artists was held in an effort to unify all of the kwans
together under one umbrella organization. They decided to refer to
their arts generically and collectively under the name of Tae Kwon
Do (Foot Fist Way or Way of the Hand and Foot), a name suggested
by General Choi Hong Hi, an influential political and military
leader. On September 14, 1961, the member kwans were officially
consolidated with the support of the Korean government, as the
Korean Taekwondo Association (KTA), and they established their
headquarters at the Kuki Won (National Technique Organization)
in Seoul.
Hwang Kee did not agree with the
decision to consolidate and withdrew from the negotiations early on.
Hwang remained autonomous and continued to call his art Tang Soo Do.
Some time later, the Ji Do Kwan also withdrew from the Tae Kwon Do
movement, and aligned with Hwang Kee’s Moo Duk Kwan under the banner
of the Dae Han Soo Bahk Do Hoi (Greater Korean Hand Strike Way
Association). A faction of the Moo Duk Kwan, headed by Hong Chong
Su, broke away from Hwang Kee’s school, to form a branch of the
Moo Duk Kwan aligned within the KTA. This branch would later call
itself Tae Kwon Do Moo Duk Kwan. Because the term Tae Kwon Do
was being used by all of the other kwans, the term Tang Soo Do became
almost synonymous with the particular lineage and style of the Moo Duk
Kwan school.
Rivalries eventually developed between
Tang Soo Do and Tae Kwon Do. Factions within the Tae Kwon Do
movement, allegedly supported by the Government, attempted to block
the Soo Bahk Do Hoi from operating sucessfully. In 1975, this dispute
went before the Korean Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of Hwang
Kee and the Moo Duk Kwan.
The Moo Duk Kwan continued to grow, and
eventually began to establish schools within the United States, by
means of U.S. Servicemen who had trained at one of the several Moo Duk
Kwan dojangs in Korea. Shin Jae Chul was sent to Springfield,
N.J. to officially establish a United States branch of the Moo Duk
Kwan, known as the U.S. Tang Soo Do Moo Duk Kwan Federation.
In 1978, Hwang Kee sent his son, Hwang Hyun Chul to the U.S. to
take over as the head of the Federation. Shortly thereafter, in the
early 1980’s, Shin broke away from the Moo Duk Kwan and formed his own
organization, known as the World Tang Soo Do Association.
Following Shin’s departure, numerous other Korean and American run
schools began to leave the parent organization. Many other
organizations were established and Tang Soo Do was no longer under a
single unified banner.
In 1995, the Moo Duk Kwan began to
refer to its as Soo Bahk Do, instead of Tang Soo Do, and officially
changed its name to the U.S. SooBahk Do Moo Duk Kwan Federation.
In addition, to the change in name, there were fundamental changes
made to technique, with new forms more indicative of the Chinese
influence were integrated. These new forms are the Chil Sung
(Seven Star), and Yuk Ro (Six Path) series, and Hwa Sun
Hyung (Pure Flower Form). These changes increased the trend of
senior yudanja (black belt/dan members) to break their ties
with the Moo Duk Kwan and go out on their own.
With failing
health, the Founder of the Moo Duk Kwan, Doju Nim Hwang Kee finally
succumbed peacefully on July 14, 2002, leaving his son Hwang Hyun Chul
as his designated heir to the Moo Duk Kwan. His tremendous impact on
the martial arts world will not soon be forgotten, and his legacy will
continue to live on through the thousands of Tang Soo Do and Soo Bahk
Do practitioners in the world. |