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Text: 303-715-8474

 TRADITIONAL ARCHERY
弓​ - 射道 - ​弩

Traditional Archery is taught at Imperial Combat Arts as part of an advanced weapon study. This Archery study includes the use of Recurves, Straight Bows, Horsebows, and Crossbows for hunting, survival, combat, and also for Traditional Archery competition. Imperial Combat Arts Headquarters School in Denver Colorado has indoor and outdoor target ranges for both Archery and other ranged weapons, as well as ranges used by the school in the Rocky Mountains.
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Archery has been practiced in China for centuries for both hunting and warfare. As one of the Six Nobel Arts, Archery was an important part of Chinese culture which aside from its well known uses, was part of developing ones strength, focus, and intent. Being skilled at Archery was a virtue sought by Emperors, Noblemen, & Sages. Confucius was an Archery Instructor, and Lao Tzu the author of The Tao Te Ching  was also a Master Archer.

"In archery we have something like the way of the superior man. When the archer misses the center of the target, he turns round and seeks for the cause of his failure in himself."    
-Confucius

MONGOLIAN DRAW

Asiatic Archery uses a Thumb Draw and Release. The Thumb Draw is traditional for archers from the Asian Steppes, through to Korea, China, Persia, Russia and Turkey, and was also used by the Romans and Byzantines. The bow is drawn with the thumb, the arrow sits on the other thumb with no shelf, and the arrow is loaded on the opposite side of the bow than with classic Mediterranean style archery. 

MEDITERRANEAN DRAW

Masters at Imperial Combat Arts also train and teach Archery with western bows & Mediterranean Draws. This style of archery comes from Europe and the Middle East and is the most common form of Archery in the United States. Though it is seen as inferior with a shorter draw length, string slap, and slow reloading, it is taught as a Archery sub-style to allow students to be proficient in all types of bows.

MANCHURIAN BOW
满弓

Picture Manchurian Archery Bow
MAN KUNG | MAN GONG
 - Av Bow Height: 4' 10"
 - Av Max Draw length: 36"
 - Av Draw Weights: 40-160 lbs
​

The Manchu Bow is a strong bow that was used by Imperial Ch'ing Archers, and is the primary bow trained at Imperial Combat Arts. This bow measures up to 5ft in length and can shoot a variety of heavy arrows some up to 3ft long. Also known today as the Chinese Bow, this effective weapon and it's shorter versions the Mongolian Bow and Tibetan Bow have replaced almost all other Asian Bows.

IMPERIAL BOW
​清弓

Picture Imperial Qing Archery Bow
CH'ING KUNG | QINGGONG
 - Av Bow Height: 5-7'
 - Av Max Draw length: 36"
 - Av Draw Weights: 80-240 lbs

These Manchu Heavy Bows are near identical to the standard Manchu bow with the exception the are much stiffer and larger bows that have a heavy draw weight. Also known as "war bows" or "strength bows", these powerful bows are strong enough to penetrate armor. Archers would go to war with a bow only 50-75% the strength of their max draw weight, at a minimum of 80 lbs, and at a average of 135 pounds.

Manchurian bows were graded by "strength" from three (40 pounds) to as high as eighteen (240 pounds), according to their stiffness. Ability at strength of six (80 pounds) was considered minimal for a grown man, and strength of ten (133 pounds) was required for participation in hunts." 
​-Mark C. Elliott, professor of Chinese and Inner Asian History at Harvard University.

MONGOLIAN BOW
蒙古弓

Picture Mongolian Archery Bow
MENG KU KUNG | MENG GU GONG
 - Av Bow Height: 4' 5"
 - Av Max Draw length: 31
 - Av Draw Weights: 20-160 lbs

​This powerful bow is slightly smaller than the Manchu Bow with a shorter draw. The short length of the Mongol Bow was designed for horseback, and now works well in thick cover, rough terrain, close quarters, and offers rapid reloading, shooting with either hand, and shooting from rare postures. From the 1700's forward Mongol Bows now feature the large siyahs and string bridges of the Manchu Bow.

TIBETAN BOW
​藏族弓

Picture Tibetan Archery Bow
TSANG TSU KUNG |ZANGZUGONG
 - Av Bow Height: 3' 11"- 4' 5"
 - Av Max Draw length: 33
 - Av Draw Weights: 20-160 lbs

This Bow today is also a variation of the Manchu Bow, that is shorter and easier to handle while still offering powerful shooting. This short bow can be just under four feet in height making it a fast and accurate bow that is still used in Tibet today. These bows are the shortest of four Manchurian style bows trained at Imperial Combat Arts. The four bows give varied options in the training of Manchurian Archery.

TURKISH BOW
​土耳其​弓

Picture Turkish Archery Bow
TUER CHI KUNG
 - Av Bow Height: 3' 8"
 - Av Max Draw length: 29"
 - Av Draw Weights: 20-160 lbs
​
​Turkish Bows, also known as Ottoman Bows, were some of the finest and most legendary bows of history. These short recurve bows were some of the shortest in history and can fire lighter arrows at great distances, with a still unbeaten record of just over 925 yards. Today we use these bows at Imperial Combat Arts as our primary bows for Flight Archery. The Ottoman Empire also used heavy War Bows.

CHINESE STRAIGHT BOW
​桑木弓

Picture Chinese Archery Straight Bow
SANG MU KUNG | SANG MU GONG
 - Av Bow Height: 4'-7'
 - Av Max Draw length: 29"-31"
 - Av Draw Weights: 20-160 lbs

In wetter climates most of the world favored the use of straight wooden self-bows over composite bows, as humidity will damage a composite bow. Traditional Manchu straight-bows, for southern and tropical use, were made of Mulberry wood. Today our Archers will use a variety of choice woods. Straight Bows need to be long to offer enough power for combat and can measure up to seven feet in length. ​

CROSSBOW
弩

Picture Chinese Crossbow
NU
 - Crossbows can range greatly from small single man bows, to heavy crossbows, up to massive crossbows mounted on wagons and drawn by several men. 

The Chinese Crossbow dates back to the Bronze Age with several types of unique crossbows having been developed such as: repeating crossbows, multi-shot crossbows, artillery crossbows, and even repeating multi-shot crossbows. Chinese crossbows are usually drawn from a lying position or by standing on them and pulling upward. Crossbows rely on mechanics and can be stronger than any conventional bow.

PRIMITIVE BOWS
​
原始​​弓

Picture Primitive Archery Bow
 YUAN SHIH KUNG | YUANSHIGONG
 - Av Bow Height: 4'-7'
 - Av Max Draw length: 25"-31"
 - Av Draw Weights: 20-160 lbs


​Primitive bows are self-bows made from a single piece of wood or bamboo and are common in many tribal cultures. These bows are important in survival as they can be made by one man in just a few hours, with materials that can be easily found in nature. These bows may lack the power of a well crafted bow but can still be strong enough to take smaller game, or be used in wilderness combat if necessary. 

Asiatic Bows have no shelf or arrow rest and can be shot ambidextrously. This allows an archer to shoot with either hand and from either side of the bow. This ability opens up more shooting angles especially when shooting from cover or around obstacles. 

TRAINING ARCHERY

Picture Archery Range
Archery has deep meaning in our martial arts, and our ranking systems that stem from Chinese Imperial Bodyguards. Once a crucial combat skill, Traditional Archery is now taught second to the use of Firearms at Imperial Combat Arts. Though guns have greatly replaced the bow for combat, there has been a great reemergence of interest in the traditional skills that have been such a significant part of martial arts for centuries. 

TARGET PRACTICE

Imperial Combat Arts Headquarter school has both indoor and outdoor target ranges for Archery, as well as thrown weapons such as knives and Axes. Additionally there are several ranges used by the school in the nearby Rocky Mountains for the training of Archery and Firearms. Target ranges start with basic shooting then move into reactive targets, moving targets, barricades, flight archery targets, and challenging courses that involve moving and shooting.

FLIGHT ARCHERY

Aside from standard Target Archery there is another important aspect of Archery that was used in battle, known today primarily as Clout Archery. This is a skill to rain arrows down upon targets at a distance. Today at Imperial Combat Arts students train to drop their arrows down on a grouping of human shaped targets that are placed at varied distances up to 250 yards. A war arrow can wound at 250 yards, kill at 100 yards and penetrate armor at 60 yards. 

INSTINCTIVE ARCHERY

Traditional Bows are shot instinctively and not aimed by any point of reference or aiming aid. Manchurian Bow mastery requires a deep connection with the bow and its various firing methods. These bows have no shelf or arrow rest, no bow sight, no nocking point, and all reloading is done without looking. Shooting instinctively can be seen as similar to throwing a rock or ball at a target. Instinctive Archery is how all traditional bows have been shot for thousands of years.

ADVANCED ARCHERY

There are 8 levels of Archery taught at Imperial Combat Arts from beginner to mastery. Learning form and how to stand and shoot at targets is all trained in level one, this is where most peoples training ends but where the Archery really begins for our practitioners. Advanced Archery includes unique shooting postures, shooting from obstacles, shooting ambidextrously, shooting with movement, moving targets, archery tag, tracking, stalking, and traditional bow hunting.

SHOOTING POSTURES

Several unique archery postures are trained at Imperial Combat Arts aside from the primary Manchurian form. These unique postures are traditional from world history for use in specific situations and environments. Those who simply stand and shoot at a target and are sometimes quick to see these other positions as "wrong". Advanced positions are used for shooting long range, up/down steep terrain, from cover, from low cover, low realm, under obstacles, from horseback etc.

DRAW LENGTH

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​Thumb drawn bows have a longer draw length than when using a finger draw for two reasons. First the string is positioned a few inches further back in the hand, and second the anchor point can be further back without the string striking the ear or face on release. The longer the draw, the longer a bow's power-stroke will be and the faster the arrow will fly. 1" of draw length equals 15 fps of arrow velocity. Someone who draws 29" Mediterranean can draw 35" or more Mongolian style.

DRAW WEIGHT

​Draw weight is the amount of force needed to pull back a bow. Even in ancient times hunting bows only needed 50-60 lbs to bring down the largest of game. In war however bows with higher weights were required to penetrate armor. Some English longbows had up to 185 lbs draw weights, and Manchu Bows up to 240 lbs, weights only a few men can draw. Of thousands of men competing in the Imperial exams very few would draw the heaviest bows. It's important to note that a European Bows and Manchu Bows of equal poundage are not equal in strength. A Manchu Bow again has a longer draw and pound for pound shoots much faster, heavier, and more powerful arrows. 

"The champion in a 1728 contest between the one hundred top bowmen in the empire won one hundred taels when he hit the bull's-eye using an eighteen-strength bow an estimated drawing weight of almost 240 pounds!" -Mark C. Elliott

​The common English term "pulling your weight" comes from an archers expectation to be able to pull their own body weight in bow poundage. Likewise the term "draw" itself meaning "even", also represents the balance between an archer and their draw weight. It is common for men today, even some historians, to try pulling the weights of war bows or use heavy battlefield weapons and doubt if they were ever used. Its easy for some to lose sight of the fact that these men were professionals, some who had been trained for generations, and far from average. Mongol and English Archers began training to draw these weights as children and spent years working to develop the unique and often lopsided musculature needed to draw bows that otherwise very strong men usually couldn't draw. Manchurian Archers would go to war with a bow only 50-75% the strength of their max draw weight, at a minimum of 80 lbs, and at a average of 135 pounds.

TYPES OF ARROWS

Picture Manchurian Arrows
Aside from standard target arrows there are several traditional war arrows that were used in Manchurian Archery and are still part of study at Imperial Combat Arts. These heavy war arrows can measure up to three feet in length are designed to pierce armor and cause rapid blood loss. Other unique arrows include, fire arrows, exploding arrows, whistling or screaming arrows, hunting arrows, and even the Chinese arrows that use rockets to increase flight.

THUMB RINGS

When drawing a bow Mongolian Style with the thumb, a thumb ring can be used to help protect the skin. This is similar to the finger tabs used with the Mediterranean Draw. These thumb rings are very traditional and can be made of many different materials such as leather, metal, horn, or bone. These rings can be designed to give various options on exactly how a bow string is released. Over time the thumb can toughen to the point where a ring in not required, unless pulling significantly heavy bows.

Forearm protection is not needed in Asiatic Archery. This is because the arrow rests on the other side of the bow (than European Archery), therefore the bow string is not directed into the forearm upon release and there is no painful string slap.

ARCHERY COMPETITION

Imperial Combat Arts students have the option to compete annually in school Archery competitions. These competitions include target shooting, flight archery, obstacle courses, and archery tag. Champions of inter-school competitions are then sponsored by the school to compete in various local archery competitions. Student can also compete in various other competitions such as Axe Throwing, Knife Throwing, firearm target shooting, and 3 Gun firearm competitions. 

ARCHERY TAG

Archery Tag allows for small group matching with bows and arrows and uses special arrows that are tipped with foam as well as face shields and padded armor. For safety bows are limited to just 30lbs. The school competes with teams at the local indoor Archery Tag facilities located in Denver and the surrounding cities. Additionally our practitioners compete in the Rocky Mountains using stealth, camouflage, and evasion. Mountain competitions are team vs team & last man standing.

BOW HUNTING

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Hunting was likely the first use of archery followed as close by combat. Learning to track, stalk, and shoot prey from cover is a traditional part of what it means to be a true archer. Our members who have reached level VII archery have the option to join Imperial Combat Arts bow hunting group that is members only. Colorado bow hunting is available year round depending on species. Hunting is a traditional part of developing the confidence, capability, and grit of a warrior.

BOW FISHING

Colorado's waterways are beginning to open for bow-fishing. Bow fishing uses barbed arrows and a line that connects directly to the bow arm to reel in fish. Fishing in Colorado helps control invasive species and harvests wild meat for consumption. For our bow hunting group this a new and exciting type of archery that offers and additional avenue to test and practice our archery skills. Bow fishing is done from shoreline, walking shallow rivers, as well as from boats. 

HORSEBOW

The traditional bows used at Imperial Combat Arts are often referred to today as "Horsebows" due to their historical use in mounted archery. These bows were not exclusive to Horse Archers and were the same bows used by archers on foot and for hunting. More appropriately these bows are known as Asiatic Recurve Bows, Asiatic Reflex Bows, or by their region such as a Manchurian Bow. Horse archery was a legendary skill of the warriors of the Eurasian Steppes and its vast open grasslands.

HORSE ARCHERY

There are several places in Colorado that offer Horse Archery sessions where our students can practice Mounted Archery with their "Horsebows", and some students even today do occasionally own their own horses. Manchurian Archery works very well from horseback and adds a new challenging dynamic to the study of traditional archery. Students can learn the basics of horse archery simply seated over a chair before they are mounted on a horse.

EUROPEAN STRAIGHT BOW 

Picture Chinese Throwing Stars
These straight-bows are designed for Mediterranean style drawing and can vary from short-bows, up to 6.5 foot Longbows. Unlike Asian Bows most European Bows have a shelf or arrow rest to help guide the arrow. Imperial Combat Arts trains students in varied lengths of European straight-bow as a sub-study of traditional Chinese Archery. Aside from differences in drawing, the overall principles are the same.

WESTERN RECURVE

Picture Pen Dao Bi Dao įŽ”åˆ€â€‹
Western style recurves are very common Bows and a favorite to most of our archers, after the Asian style recurve. These powerful Bows were the choice bows for European countries with drier climates during the Middle Ages. Recurves have more power at shorter lengths, than straight bows, and when made with modern materials, that aren't affected by humidity, these Bows have become very durable.

AUTOMATIC ARROWS
袖箭​

Picture
HSIU CHIEN | XIUJIAN
​The Sleeve Arrow and Plum Blossom Darts were some of the most feared assassination weapons in China. These concealed weapons would launch spring loaded darts with poisons that could kill in minutes. Where the Sleeve Arrow launches one arrow, the tube of the Plum Blossom Darts can shoot six, either all at once, or one at a time. The six are one main arrow surrounded by 5 small darts. 

STONE SLINGS
飛石​

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FEI SHIH | FEI SHI
​The sling is an ancient and effective weapon that has been used for both hunting and warfare. Slings are taught as a sub-style of traditional archery as well as in survival training. There are also a select few other traditional weapons that make use of rope and chains such as Meteor Hammers, and Flying Claws, as well as sling thrown arrows that are taught as short archery sub-styles.
 Enter Page> Stone Sling

THROWN WEAPONS
​飞武器​

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FEI WU CH'I | FEI WU QI
Hand-thrown weapons are a traditional part of Chinese Weapon study. While some of these weapons had direct military applications, others are specialty weapons that were designed to deliver poisons, or were used to surprise and soften targets upon approach with a primary weapon. These thrown weapons include Knives, Axes, Spears, Needles Thorns, and Darts. Enter Page> Throwing Weapons

FIREARM TRAINING
枪械​

Picture Assault Rifle
CH'IANG HSIEH | QIANG XIE
Firearm training at Imperial Combat Arts is derived from our long military history. Our Grandmasters served as Imperial Bodyguards, Veterans of the Second Sino-Japanese War (WWII), Vietnam era Special Forces (Green Beret Officer), as well as an instructor today with Iraq War era U.S. military training. This study of modern combat tactics masters all types of  firearms. Enter Page> Firearm Training

SPEAR THROWER

The spear-thrower, also known as an Atlatl, is a lever that greatly increases the power and distance of spear in flight. Many of these throwing spears are large darts that have feathers like an arrow and can range between 4-9 feet in length. This technology is older than archery dating back at least 30,000 years. These primitive hunting tools today are an important part of wilderness survival in that they are relatively easy to make and can still kill large game. Enter Page> Spear Thrower

TRADITION ARCHERY TEXTS

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Read traditional Chinese Archery texts in our schools extensive online library.
  • Imperial Archery - Liu Chi
  • Archery Method of Huang Zheng-nan
  • Archery Style of Ch'i Chi Kuang
  • Mounted Archery - Liu Chi
  • Mounted Archery - Cheng Tzu-I​
  • Horse Archery - Ching Hsi
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