About: So Rim Jang Kwon   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

This form is a traditional taekwondo form, meaning it pre-dates contemporary forms (such as those used by the ITF, ATA, and WTF). In other words, this is a form used during the 1950s within the Nine Kwans that eventually came together to form taekwondo. * Older forms such as this one were often based on forms from other martial arts. * The details and names of these older forms tend to vary more widely from school to school as well. The version shown here is just one version; the reader should recognize that there will be variations among schools.

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  • So Rim Jang Kwon
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  • This form is a traditional taekwondo form, meaning it pre-dates contemporary forms (such as those used by the ITF, ATA, and WTF). In other words, this is a form used during the 1950s within the Nine Kwans that eventually came together to form taekwondo. * Older forms such as this one were often based on forms from other martial arts. * The details and names of these older forms tend to vary more widely from school to school as well. The version shown here is just one version; the reader should recognize that there will be variations among schools.
dbkwik:taekwondo/p...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • This form is a traditional taekwondo form, meaning it pre-dates contemporary forms (such as those used by the ITF, ATA, and WTF). In other words, this is a form used during the 1950s within the Nine Kwans that eventually came together to form taekwondo. * Older forms such as this one were often based on forms from other martial arts. * The details and names of these older forms tend to vary more widely from school to school as well. The version shown here is just one version; the reader should recognize that there will be variations among schools. The Chinese forms So Rim Jang Kwon and Tae Kuk Kwan forms were introduced to Traditional Taekwondo by Hwang Kee. So Rim Jang Kwon is the Korean pronunciation of Shaolin Chang Quan or "Little Forest Temple Long Fist." Unlike the traditional Tang Soo Do forms from Japan, its versions contain between 17 and 24 kicks. This is an unusually high amount of kicks even for a Shaolin Long Fist form. A slightly different version is still practiced today in some modern kung fu schools as Jie Quan "Connecting Fist."
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