Heavy-sword Martial Art of the Hui Minority is a sort 
of martial art popular in Beijing and Tianjin areas in China, with heavy swords 
as martial-art weapons. Heavy sword is the original name of the broadsword which 
has a history of thousands of years in China. The broadsword of the Hui people 
in Tianjin became famous in the early years of the reign of Emperor Chengzu in 
the Ming Dynasty. Legend has it that the ancestor of the Hun ethnic group is a 
general who always carried a 30kg broadsword in battles. Afterwards, the 
broadsword martial art was passed down from generation to generation. By modern 
times, the broadsword of Imam Caojinzao, the descendant of the general, weighs 
80kg and the broadsword becomes an gymnastic equipment. Since the Tang Dynasty, the heavy sword served as a 
principal weapon in the imperial military examination. Having absorbed skills of 
bow, sword, stone, seated-position archery and other subjects, heavy-sword 
martial art is featured by the combination of hardness and flexibility as well 
as movements and stillness. There are a variety of movements and skills in 
brandishing the broadsword such as lifting, grabbing, wresting, revolving, 
hanging on neck, flying on back, and cleaving water, which are not only visual 
enjoyment and but also display the Hui people’s martialism and body-building 
spirit. The Hui Minority Broadsword Crew has preserved 
broadswords, stone blocks, stone locks and arm-holding stone of the Qing 
Dynasty. Among the articles there is a 100kg stone lock which is the heaviest 
lock in China. The one who can lift this stone lock with a single arm is Zhang 
Jinbiao, one of the first-generation disciples of Imam Caojinzao. The 
arm-holding stone is a Champion Stone awarded by an emperor in the Qing Dynasty. 
It weighs over 200kg and is carved with the characters “?e°?ìa??” (means winning 
the championship).
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