Movements - 29
Ready Posture - CLOSED READY STANCE C |
1. |
Step Right Foot into Square Horse Stance,
Left Palm Heel. |
2. |
Right Punch. |
3. |
Left Punch. |
4. |
Step to Right Back Stance to 3 oclock,
C-Block. |
5. |
Left Upper Punch. |
6. |
Right Inward Hammer. |
7. |
Hop up while Right Downward Knifehand
Strike. |
8. |
Step to Left Forward to 3 oclock, Left
Punch. |
9. |
Step to Left Forward to 12 oclock, Left
Downward Block. |
10. |
Step to Right Forward Stance, Right
Punch. |
11. |
Steep Left Foot to Right, Chamber on
Right. |
12. |
Land in Left Back Stance, Right Shuto. |
13. |
Step to Left Forward Stance, Left Punch.
|
14. |
Step to Right Forward Stance, Right
Punch. |
15. |
Step to Left Back Stance to 3 oclock,
Left Check. |
16. |
Step to Right Forward Stance, Right
Spear. |
17. |
Step to Left Back Stance to 9 oclock,
Left Check. |
18. |
Right Round Kick, Land in Right Back
Stance, Right Check. |
19. |
Left Round Kick, Land in Left Back Stance,
Left Check. |
20. |
Step to Left Forward Stance to 6 oclock,
Left Downward Block. |
21. |
Right Punch, Shifting to Box Stance. |
22. |
Step to Right Back Stance, Left Punch. |
23. |
Step to Left Back Stance, Right Punch. |
24. |
Shift to Left Forward Stance, X-Downward
block. |
25. |
Step Right Leg Around, Right Hand Downward
Knife Block. |
26. |
Step Left to Right Foot, facing 9 oclock.
|
27. |
Scissor Blocks. |
28. |
Step to Left Back Stance to 9 oclock,
Left Outward Block. |
29. |
Shuffle to Right Back Stance to 3 oclock,
Right Outward Block. |
END: Bring the right foot back to a ready posture. |
HWA-RANG is named after the Hwa-Rang
youth group, which originated in the Silla Dynasty in
the early 7th century. The 29 movements refer to the 29th
Infantry Division, where Taekwon-Do developed into maturity.
The Beginning
The Hwarang were leaders of military bands of the Silla
Dynasty. They were chosen from the young sons of the nobility
by popular election. Each Hwarang group consisted hundreds
or thousands of members. The leaders of each Hwarang group,
including the most senior leader, were referred to as
Kuk-Son. The Kuk-Son was very similar to King Arthur's
Knights of the Round Table in England around
1200. From their ranks were chosen government officials,
military leaders, field generals, and even kings who served
Silla both in times of peace and war. Most of the great
military leaders of Silla were products of Hwarang training,
and many were Kuk-Son.
Silla, established in 57 B.C., was the smallest of the
three kingdoms comprising what is now Korea. The citizens
of Silla were outnumbered and under continual threat of
military domination from the neighboring kingdoms of Paekche
and Koguryo for over 700 years.
The Hwarang were established by Chin Hung, the 24th
King of Silla (540 A.D.), who was a devoted Buddhist and
loved elegance and physical beauty. He believed in mythical
beings and male and female fairies (Sin-Sun and Sun-Nyo).
These beliefs led him to hold beauty contests the prettiest
maidens in the country, which he called WonHwa (Original
Flowers). He taught them modesty, loyalty, filial piety,
and sincerity so they would become good wives. In one
contest among 300-400 Won-Hwa, two exceptionally beautiful
young women were favored, Nam-Mo and Joon-Jung. Unfortunately,
the two began to struggle for power and influence between
themselves. Finally, in order to win the contest, Joon
Jung got Nam-Mo drunk and killed her by crushing her skull
with a rock. When the unfortunate maiden's body was found
in a shallow grave by the river, the king had Joon-Jung
put to death and disbanded the order of the Won-Hwa.
Several years after this incident the King created a
new order, the Hwarang. "Hwa" meant flower or
blossom, and "Rang" meant youth or gentle men.
The word Hwarang soon came to stand for Flower of Knighthood.
These Hwarang were selected from handsome, virtuous young
men of good families. Their selection was carried out
by popular vote among their followers; then they were
presented to the king for nomination as a Hwarang or Kuk-Son.
They learned the five cardinal principles of human relations
(kindness, justice, courtesy, intelligence, and faith),
the three scholarships (royal tutor, instructor, and teacher),
and the six ways of service (holy minister, good minister,
loyal minister, wise minister, virtuous minister, and
honest minister). The education of a Hwarang was supported
by the king and generally lasted ten years, after which
the youth usually entered into some form of service to
his country. King Chin Hung sent the Hwarang to places
of scenic beauty for physical and mental culture as true
knights of the nation. For hundreds of years the Hwarang
were taught by Kuk-Son in social etiquette, music and
songs, and patriotic behavior.
Buddhist philosophy
The Hwarang were taught the martial arts and Buddhist
faith and indoctrinated in the ways of cultured and chivalrous
warriors. They climbed rugged mountains and swam rapid
rivers in all months of the year, conditioning their minds
and bodies for endurance and discipline. Much of their
training time was spent in the mountains, at the seashore,
and on wilderness excursions; training, meditating, and
composing songs and poetry. They were taught dance, literature,
arts, and sciences, and the arts of warfare, charioteering,
archery, and hand-to-hand combat. The hand-to-hand combat
was based on the Um-Yang principles of Buddhist philosophy
and included a blending of hard and soft, linear and circular
techniques. The art of foot fighting was known as Soo-Bak
and was practiced by common people throughout the three
kingdoms. However, the Hwarang transformed and intensified
this art and added hand techniques, renaming it Tae-Kyon.
The Hwarang punches could penetrate the wooden chest armor
of an enemy and kill him; foot techniques were said to
be executed at such speed that opponents frequently thought
that the feet of Hwarang warriors were swords. In later
centuries the king of Koryo made Tae-Kyon training mandatory
for all soldiers, and annual Tae-Kyon contests were held
among all members of the Silla population on May 5th of
the Lunar Calendar.
The rank of Hwarang usually meant a man had achieved
the position of a teacher of the martial arts and commanded
500-5,000 students called Hwarang-Do. A Kuk-Son was the
master and held the rank of general in the army. Hwarang
fighting spirit was ferocious and was recorded in many
literary works including the Sam-Guk-Sagi, written by
Kim Pu-Sik in 1145, and the Hwarang-Segi. The latter was
said to have contained the records of lives and deeds
of over 200 individual l Hwa- sadly, it was lost during
the Japanese occupation in the 20th century.) The zeal
of the Hwarang helped Silla become the world's first ''Buddha
Land" and led to; the unification of the three kingdoms
of Korea. Buddhist principles were so ingrained in the
code of the Hwarang that a larger number of monks participated
in the Hwarang-Do), and during times of war they would
robes and take up or ms to die for Silla.
The Hwarang code
The Hwarang code was established in the 3Oth year of King
Chin-Hung's rule. Two noted Hwarang warriors, Kwi-San
and Chu-Hang, sought out the famous warrior and Buddhist
monk Wong-Gwang Popsa in Kusil temple on Mount Unmun and
asked that he give them lifetime commandments that those
men could follow who could not embrace the secluded life
of a Buddhist monk. The commandments, based on Confucian
and Buddhist principles, were divided into five rules
(loyalty to the king and country, obedience to one's parents,
sincerity, trust and brotherhood among friends, never
retreat in battle, and selectivity and justice in the
killing of living things), and nine virtues (humanity,
justice, courtesy, wisdom, trust, goodness, virtue, loyalty,
and courage). These principles were not taken lightly,
as in the case of Kwi-San and Chu-Hang, who rescued their
own commander, General Muun, when he
was ambushed and fell from his horse during a battle in
603 A.D. Attacking the enemy, these two Hwarang were heard
to cry out to their followers, "Now is the time to
follow the commandment to not retreat in battle!"
After giving one of their horses to the general, they
killed a great number of the pursuing enemy and finally,
"bleeding from a thousand wounds," they both
died.
The code of the Hwarang is similar to the more commonly
known code of the Japanese samurai, Bushido. The Bushido
code was established in feudal Japan during the 12th to
the 17th centuries to serve as a social guide rule of
life, and set of ideals for the samurai or military class.
The code of the Hwarang-Do played a similar role in the
Korean kingdom of Silla approximately 1,000 years earlier.
Being established during the 6th to the 10th centuries,
Hwarang-Do was considered more ancient and refined than
Bushido. The Silla Dynasty lasted 1,000 years, and the
Code of the Hwarang, known as Sesok-Ogye, endured throughout
the Silla and Koryo dynasties. Its influence led to a
unified national spirit and ultimately the unification
of the three kingdoms of Korea around 668 A.D. The practice
of Bushido appears to have perpetuated a feudal system
in Japan for over 700 years with continual provincial
wars, whereas Silla and Koryo thrived under the influence
of the Hwarang. These Korean dynasties, based on Hwarang
ethics, remained internally peaceful and prosperous for
over 1,500 years while defending themselves against a
multitude of foreign invasions. This can be compared to
the Roman Empire, which thrived for only 1,000 years.
Oyama Masutatsu, a well-known authority on Karate in Japan,
has even suggested that the Hwarang were the forerunners
of the Japanese samurai.
The first recorded Hwarang hero
Sul Won-Nang was elected as the first Kuk-Son or head
of the Hwarang order. But the first recorded Hwarang hero
was Sa Da-Ham. At the young age of 15 he raised his own
1,000-man army in support of Silla in its war against
the neighboring kingdom of Kara. He requested and was
granted the honor of leading this force in support of
the Silla army attacking the main fort of the Kara in
562 A.D. As the first to breach the walls of the enemy
fort, he was highly praised and rewarded by King Chin
Hung for his bravery. He was offered 300 slaves and a
large tract of land as a reward, but released the slaves
and refused the land, stating that he did not wish to
receive personal
rewards for his deeds. He did agree to accept a small
amount of fertile soil as a matter of courtesy to the
King. However, when his best friend was killed in battle,
Sa Da-Ham was inconsolable. As a youth Sa Da-Ham and his
friend had made pact-of-death should either of them ever
die in battle. True to his promise, Sa Da-Ham starved
himself to death demonstrating his loyalty and adherence
to the code of the Hwarang.
The driving force in the unification of the Korean
Another legendary Korean was General Kim Yoo-Sin who became
a Hwarang at the age of 15 and was an accomplished swordsman
and a Kuk-Son by the time he was 18 years old. By the
age of 34 he had been given the command of the Silla armed
forces. He is regarded as the driving force in the unification
of the Korean peninsula and the most famous of all the
generals in the unification wars. Kim Yoo-Sin was active
on all fronts in the wars, and at several times simultaneously
conducted battles against both Paekche and Koguryo. He
defeated the great Paeckche general Gae-Baek in the battle
in which Gae-Back was killed. Once, while Silla was allied
with China against Paekche, a heated argument began between
Kim Yoo-Sin's commander and a Chinese general. As the
argument escalated into a potentially bloody confrontation,
the sword of Kim Yoo-Sin was said to have leaped from
its scabbard into his hand. Because the sword of a warrior
was believed to be his soul, this occurrence so frightened
the Chinese general blat he immediately apologized to
the Silla officers. Incidences such as this kept the Chinese
in awe of the Hwarang. In later years when asked by the
Chinese emperor to attack Silla, the Chinese generals
claimed that although Silla was small, it could not be
defeated. Kim Yoo-Sin lived to the age of 79 and is considered
one of Korea's most famous generals. He had five sons,
who along with his wife contributed great deeds to the
historical records of the Hwarang.
Another
dedicated Hwarang, Kwan Chang, became a Hwarang commander
at the age of 16 and was the son of Kim Yoo-Sin's Assistant
General Kim Pumil. In 655 A.D., he fought in the battle
of Hwangsan against Paekche under General Kim Yoo-Sin.
During this battle he dashed headlong into the enemy camp
and killed many Paekche soldiers, but was finally captured.
Ibis high ranking battle crest indicated that he was the
son of a general so he was taken before the Paekche general,
Gae-Baek. Surprised by Kwan Chang's youthfulness when
his helmet was removed, and thinking of his own young
son, Gae-Baek decided that instead of executing him as
was the custom with captured officers, he would return
the young Hwarang to the Silla lines. GaeBaek remarked,
"Alas, how can we match the army of Silla! Even a
young boy like this has such courage, not to speak of
Silla's men." Kwan Chang went before his father and
asked permission to be sent back into battle at the head
of his men. After a day-long battle Kwan Chang was again
captured. After he had been disarmed, he broke free of
his two guards, killing them with his hands and feet,
and then attacked the Paekche general's second in command.
With a flying reverse turning kick to the head of the
commander, who sat eight feet high atop his horse, Kwan
Chang killed him. After finally being subdued once more,
he was again taken before the Packche general. This time
Gae-Baek said "I gave you your life once because
of your youth, but now you return to take the life of
my best field commander." He then had Kwan Chang
executed and his body returned to the Silla lines. General
Kim Pumil was proud that his son had died so bravely in
the service of his king. He said to his men, "it
seems as if my son's honor is alive. I am fortunate that
he died for the King." He then rallied his army and
went on to defeat the Paekche forces.
The spirit of the Hwarang was present in all of the kingdoms
of Korea during this time, and although not as evident
as in Silla, it was demonstrated by such great Korean
historical figures as Yon-Gye, Ul-Ji Moon-Duk, and Moon-
Moo This spirit was kept alive throughout history by many
individuals. Hwarang and the martial arts fell out of
favor during the Yi Dynasty (1392-1910) and adherence
to the Hwarang
code declined. Several Koreans did keep the code, however,
notably Admiral Yi Sun-Sin who was instrumental in defeating
the Japanese invasions of Korea in 1592 and 1597. The
spirit of the Hwarang and their code was present in Buddhist
temples by monks. For example, in the 16th century two
monks, Su San and who followed the Hwarang code, rallied
a Buddhist army that was instrumental in driving the Japanese
invasion forces from Korea
Stories of the Hwarang and their individual feats illustrate
the code of the Hwarang, the type of ethics and morality
essential to the evolution of the martial arts and the
success Silla as a nation. This code has profoundly affected
the Korean people and their culture throughout history.
The lives and deeds of the Hwarang illustrate a level
of courage, honor, wisdom, culture, compassion, and impeccable
conduct that few men in history have demonstrated. The
dedication and self-sacrifice of the Hwarang was clearly
based on principles much stronger than ego and self interest.
This basis was the Sesok-Ogye, the code of the Hwarang.
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Pattern and History - 8/15/02