Taegeuk Chil Jang


Taegeuk Chil Jang is the seventh of eight taekwondo forms practiced by the Kukkiwon and the World Taekwondo Federation. A form, or poomsae, is a choreographed pattern of defense-and-attack motions. Taegeuk Chil Jang is often practiced by students of Kukkiwon/WTF-style taekwondo with rank of 2nd geup. Second geup students of Kukkiwon/WTF-style taekwondo practice this form in order to advance to the next rank.

Etymology

[FIle:Taegeuk.svg|thumb|The taegeuk symbol]
The word taegeuk refers to the universe from which all things and values are derived. It is also the symbol that makes up the center of the flag of South Korea and the source for its name, taegeukgi. The taegeuk is commonly associated with Korean Taoism philosophical values as well as Korean shamanism.
The word chil is the number 7 in the Sino-Korean numbering system. The word jang translates roughly as "chapter" or "part". Taegeuk Chil Jang translates as "Part 7 of the Taegeuk".

Symbolism

The floor pattern of each taegeuk poomsae is three parallel lines. On each line, a 180 degree turn is performed.
  • If the turn is performed by pivoting in-place, the line is considered to be a broken line.
  • If the turn is performed by moving the lead foot to the rear, the line is considered to be a solid line.
The floor pattern of each taegeuk poomsae then represents three broken or solid lines, called trigrams or gwae. Each trigram corresponds to a natural element.
乾 Qián
兌 Duì
離 Lí
震 Zhèn
巽 Xùn
坎 Kǎn
艮 Gèn
坤 Kūn
Heaven/SkyLake/MarshFireThunderWindWaterMountainEarth
天 Tiān澤 Zé火 Huǒ雷 Léi風 Fēng水 Shuǐ山 Shān地 Dì
GunTaeYiJinSeonGamGanGon


The first two turns of Taegeuk Chil Jang are performed by pivoting in-place. The final turn is performed by moving the lead foot. This indicates that the associated trigram is a broken line, a broken line, and a solid line; this is the trigram for mountain. The Kukkiwon teaches that this poomsae should be performed with movements that are unyielding and immovable.

Techniques

As an advanced poomsae, this form introduces the student to a large number of new techniques:
  • This form begins with a tiger stance. In Korean culture, tigers are associated with life in the mountains; the prominence of the tiger stance in this form is an example of the "mountain" motif being represented in the form's movements.
  • Low double knifehand block
  • A palm block and a backfist strike, both performed on a supporting arm
  • A scissors block
  • Shoulder-height opening block
  • Strike to the abdomen using the knee
  • A hinge-block chamber leading up to a low cross block. This is the first block seen in the Taegeuk poomsae that is not a "deflecting" block. In other words, this block traps an attack rather than deflecting it; this is an example of an "unyielding/immovable" movement in this form.
  • Target kick

Development

During the 1920s and 1930s many of the pioneers of taekwondo studied karate or Chinese martial arts in which forms practice is seen as an essential element of the martial art. When these pioneers returned to Korea after the Japanese occupation, they incorporated forms practice into their teaching. During the 1960s there were several efforts among these pioneers to unify their styles of martial art and create a consolidated set of forms. In 1965 the Korea Taekwondo Association appointed a committee of representatives from six of the Nine Kwans to develop the forms for what is now called Kukkiwon- or WTF-style taekwondo. The committee consisted of:
In 1967, this committee introduced the Palgwae and Yudanja forms. In 1971 two additional kwans joined the committee:
This expanded committee went on to develop the Taegeuk forms.