. . . "Chan Hak Fu ,"@en . "Tibetan White Crane (Chinese: \u897F\u85CF\u767D\u9DB4\u62F3, \"Tibetan White Crane Fist\"), also known in Cantonese as Bak Hok Pai (\u767D\u9DB4\u6D3E, \"White Crane Style\"), is a Chinese martial art with origins in 15th-century Tibetan culture that has developed deep roots in southern China. Tibetan White Crane became so established in Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau by the twentieth century that it was accepted as a local martial art in that region. From there it has spread around the world. Lama Pai (\u5587\u561B\u6D3E) and Hop Ga Kuen (\u4FE0\u5BB6\u62F3) are closely related branches of the same lineage descending from the same original art, which the founder called Lion's Roar (\u7345\u5B50\u543C). This style is not related to Fujian White Crane (\u798F\u5EFA\u767D\u9DB4\u62F3), which developed independently in Fujian Province within the Southern Shaolin Five Animals tradition. Tibetan White Crane played an important role at a key pivot point in Chinese and worldwide popular culture, when a 1954 charity match between a master of that art and a master of t'ai chi ch'uan attracted massive attendance and avid media coverage, generated broad acceptance and celebration of Chinese martial arts, and resulted in new waves of wuxia (martial hero) literature and kung-fu film that continue to this day."@en . . . . . . . "Il termine Pak Hok Pai (\u767D\u9DB4\u6D3E, Baihepai) in lingua cantonese significa stile della gru bianca e uno degli stili di Kung fu."@it . . . . "Tibetan White Crane"@en . . . . "Pak Hok Pai ,"@en . . "Ng Siu-chung ,"@en . . "Closely related to:"@en . "15"^^ . . "1119353490"^^ . . "Bai He Pai"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Adatuo , also known as the Dai Dat Lama"@en . . . . ""@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Lion's Roar"@en . . . . ""@en . . "Luk Chi Fu"@en . . . . "X\u012Bz\u00E0ng B\u00E1ih\u00E8qu\u00E1n"@en . "China"@en . . . . . . . . . "Il termine Pak Hok Pai (\u767D\u9DB4\u6D3E, Baihepai) in lingua cantonese significa stile della gru bianca e uno degli stili di Kung fu."@it . ""@en . . . . . . . "66133914"^^ . . . . . . . . "Kwong Poon Fu ,"@en . "\u897F\u85CF\u767D\u9DB4\u62F3"@en . . . . . . . . . "Pak Hok Pai"@it . . ""@en . . "\u2022 Lama Pai"@en . . . . . . . "\u2022 Hop Ga Kuen"@en . . . "sai1 zong6 baak6 hok6 kyun4"@en . . ""@en . . "Tibetan White Crane (Chinese: \u897F\u85CF\u767D\u9DB4\u62F3, \"Tibetan White Crane Fist\"), also known in Cantonese as Bak Hok Pai (\u767D\u9DB4\u6D3E, \"White Crane Style\"), is a Chinese martial art with origins in 15th-century Tibetan culture that has developed deep roots in southern China. Tibetan White Crane became so established in Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau by the twentieth century that it was accepted as a local martial art in that region. From there it has spread around the world."@en . . ""@en . "Tibetan White Crane"@en . "31485"^^ . . . "Sing Lung ,"@en . . .