It is said that the "Qi Family Fist" was created by Qi Jiguang, a famous patriotic general and great national hero in the Ming Dynasty, who combined the strengths of various famous boxing styles at that time. It is impossible to verify whether this set of boxing really originated from Qi Jiguang. The person who has a record of modern inheritance is Kou Zushi in the 1930s, a native of Cangzhou, Hebei Province. His name is unknown and he called himself "San Ye". During the puppet Manchukuo period, he worked hard in the Fuxin coal mine in Liaoning Province. He passed this skill to his master Zhu Yuntian. After liberation, Master Zhu Yuntian passed this skill to Mr. Liu De'en in Jinzhou. Master Liu won the reputation of "Divine Fist Liu" for this skill. There are many successors, and I am fortunate to be one of them. Qi Family Fist is simple and unpretentious, and has strong practicality. It is hard and soft, brave, entangled, squeezed and leaned. It must be kicked or hit, and it must be grabbed if it is not thrown. It is magnificent and has a clear rhythm. It is devastating when it moves, and unfathomable when it is still. It is inherited from each other, and it can win when it encounters an enemy, with endless changes. Qijiaquan has been handed down since the Ming Dynasty. Its main popular areas are Taizhou, Zhejiang Province, some counties and cities of Wenzhou City, Tong County, Hebei Province, Penglai City, Shandong Province, etc. Qi Baoxiang, the 14th generation grandson of Qi Jiguang and a teacher in Tong County, Beijing, has compiled the current practice routine of Qijiaquan based on the family tradition and the 32-style boxing techniques in Qi Jiguang's "Boxing Essentials".