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This wiki is about historic kungfu routines and their practical fight applications.
This wiki is about historic kungfu routines and their practical fight applications.
We split routines into seperate movements, called 'postures'.  
We split routines into seperate movements, called 'postures'.  
Our research hypothesis is, that every posture identifies a kungfu technique with a unique fighting application. This means, in contrary to many traditional kungfu lineages, we assume that every posture has '''a single and unique application'''. Thus, if two routines showing the same posture, we assume, that the general fight application of that postures is generally equal (just differing in small details, according to the specific situation in the routine) see [[Routine_theory|Routine theory]].  
Our research hypothesis is, that every posture identifies a kungfu technique with a unique fighting application. This means, in contrary to many traditional kungfu lineages, we assume that every posture has '''a single and unique application'''. Thus, if two routines showing the same posture, we assume, that the general fight application of that postures is generally equal (just differing in small details, according to the specific situation in the routine).
See [[Routine_theory|Routine theory]].  


The following pages reflect that research:
The following pages reflect that research:

Revision as of 10:06, 20 November 2024

Purpose of this wiki

This wiki displays the results of the citizen science project Key to Kungfu
We provide open knowledge about historic kungfu routines and techniques as well as our interpretations regarding fight applications.

Wiki structure

This wiki contains two main sections:

Enter warrior section
Scholar section
Free knowledge, research results and data about kungfu applications and routine interpretation
Enter warrior section
Warrior section
Specific training content for fighters, applying the knowledge from scholar section


Routine interpretation

This wiki is about historic kungfu routines and their practical fight applications. We split routines into seperate movements, called 'postures'. Our research hypothesis is, that every posture identifies a kungfu technique with a unique fighting application. This means, in contrary to many traditional kungfu lineages, we assume that every posture has a single and unique application. Thus, if two routines showing the same posture, we assume, that the general fight application of that postures is generally equal (just differing in small details, according to the specific situation in the routine). See Routine theory.

The following pages reflect that research:

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Routines
Interpretation and analysis of kungfu routines. Video content of the routine application (partner form)
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Techniques
Generalized base techniques that have a specific and unique fight application that is symbolized by the postures in routines
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Strategy
Structure of kungfu techniques and their possible combinations
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Scholarship
Custom articles about routine theory and specific techniques of special interest


Sources and tools

We use video, image and text data to align our interpretations with the historical sources and facts. Beside image and video material about routines, we strongly utilizing written records about routines, called 'QuanPu'. To ensure domain specific translation, we build specialized tools like our QuanPu translator.

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Glossary
List of terms, used in quan pu and in kungfu documents. Background info about meaning and historic provenance
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Quan pu
Archive of historic text sources about kungfu routines (quanpu)
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Translator
Translator for quan pu content. Aligning data from Falk Dictionary of martial arts, Wiktionary.org, chinese symbol history, as well as our own research
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Data
Collection of raw data material from our research. All content in this wiki is based on that


Research standard

Our research is guided by the guidelines of the German Research Foundation (DFG) to ensure good scientific practise This includes in particular:

  • Commitment to good scientific practise by all group members
  • Ensuring an continuous open dialogue about research results
  • Interpreting kungfu in 'data-driven' processes, defining hypothesis and testing them against all existing data (research design)
  • Developing and maintaining methods and standards like quantitative metrics to score and document the (un)certainty of all interpretations
  • Documenting our decision processes and underlying facts and provide these along with our results
  • Cross-phase quality assurance by testing interpretations against data, theory and praxis especially together with martial art practitioners from combat sports in sparring and tournaments.
  • Open access: We provide open access to all research data following the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable)

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