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Mural of Shaolin fighting monks on wushu training hall of hotel with adjacent wushu institute, D

2010henan > albums > 01 Dengfeng

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Shaolin Monastery has been destroyed and rebuilt many times. In 1641, the troops of anti-Ming rebel Li Zicheng sacked the monastery due to the monks' support of the Ming and the possible threat they posed to the rebels. This effectively destroyed the temple's fighting force. Perhaps the best-known story of the Temple's destruction is that it was destroyed by the Qing government for supposed anti-Qing activities. Variously said to have taken place in 1647 under the Shunzhi Emperor, in 1674 under the Kangxi Emperor, or in 1732 under the Yongzheng Emperor, this destruction is also supposed to have helped spread Shaolin martial arts through China by means of the five fugitive monks Ng Mui, Jee Shin Shim Shee, Fung Doe Duk, Miu Hin and Bak Mei. Some accounts claim that a supposed southern Shaolin Temple was destroyed instead of, or in addition to, the temple in Henan: Ju Ke, in the Qing bai lei chao (1917), locates this temple in Fujian Province. This account states that Ming loyalists infiltrated the Southern Temple to disseminate anti-Qing ideology and that the Qing Emperor himself infiltrated the Southern Temple to learn Shaolin Kung Fu. Tibetan Lamas were said to have aided Yongzheng Emperor's army in razing the Temple with a deadly flying weapon known as "Huit Tik Tze" or a flying guillotine. (source: Wikipedia)

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