The Ancient Tomb Sect (simplified: 古墓派, traditional: 古墓派, Jyutping: gu2 mou6 paai3, pinyin: Gǔmù Pài) is a unique and reclusive martial arts school founded by Lin Chaoying in the mysterious Tomb of the Living Dead beneath Zhongnan Mountains. Distinguished by its unconventional origins, strict sect rules, and martial arts specifically designed to counter Quanzhen Order techniques, the Ancient Tomb Sect represents one of the most enigmatic factions in the jianghu.1
The sect’s name derives from its practitioners’ residence in the ancient underground tomb complex, originally constructed by Wang Chongyang as a military storage facility during his anti-Jin resistance efforts. Under Lin Chaoying’s leadership, this hidden fortress became the foundation for a martial arts tradition emphasizing isolation, emotional detachment, and the perfection of techniques designed to defeat the very master who had rejected her love.
Throughout its history, the Ancient Tomb Sect has remained deliberately small and secretive, rarely exceeding more than a few practitioners at any given time. Its influence on the jianghu far exceeded its size, particularly during the era of Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü, when the sect’s unique martial arts and dramatic romantic entanglements made it legendary throughout the martial arts world.
Origins and founding
Wang Chongyang’s tomb
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s story begins with the underground complex built by Wang Chongyang, founder of the Quanzhen Order, during his resistance against the Jin Empire. Originally designed as a sophisticated military warehouse disguised as an ancient burial site, the structure featured elaborate mechanical defenses, hidden chambers, and ingenious architectural elements that would later serve the sect’s needs perfectly.
When Wang’s anti-Jin uprising failed, he retreated to this underground fortress in despair, renaming it the “Tomb of the Living Dead” to reflect his emotional state—feeling dead to the world while still physically alive. The tomb’s design incorporated numerous defensive mechanisms, secret passages, and specialized chambers that would prove essential for the sect’s later development and protection.
The complex’s location beneath Zhongnan Mountains, adjacent to where Wang would later establish the Quanzhen Order’s headquarters, created an ironic geographical proximity between the two factions that would define their relationship for generations. This physical closeness intensified both the romantic and martial tensions that characterized their interactions.
Lin Chaoying’s transformation
Lin Chaoying, a martial arts prodigy whose beauty was matched only by her fierce pride, fell deeply in love with Wang Chongyang. Her attempts to draw him from his self-imposed isolation led to a famous seven-day verbal confrontation outside the tomb, where she alternately pleaded, threatened, and mocked him in an effort to rekindle his interest in the outside world.
When Wang finally emerged to silence her, Lin employed a cunning stratagem, suggesting they settle their differences through a wager involving martial arts competition. Through clever manipulation of the contest’s terms and her superior understanding of Wang’s psychological state, she managed to win ownership of the tomb itself, forcing Wang to choose between remaining with her or establishing his religious order elsewhere.
Wang’s decision to leave and found the Quanzhen Order rather than stay with Lin represented the definitive end of their romantic possibility. Lin’s response was to take permanent residence in the tomb, dedicating herself to developing martial arts techniques specifically designed to counter and surpass everything Wang might teach his disciples, creating a legacy of both love and revenge that would define the sect’s character.
Establishment of sect traditions
Following her victory and Wang’s departure, Lin established the fundamental principles that would govern the Ancient Tomb Sect for generations. Her creation of the sect rules reflected her personal pain while establishing practical guidelines for maintaining the sect’s security and independence in its unique underground environment.
The most significant of these rules required sect members to swear never to leave the tomb unless a man unknown to the sect’s taboos willingly sacrificed his life for one of its members. This rule reflected Lin’s belief that true love required ultimate sacrifice, while also ensuring the sect’s continued isolation and protection from outside interference.
Lin’s development of the sect’s martial arts curriculum focused obsessively on countering Quanzhen techniques, reflecting both her intimate knowledge of Wang’s fighting methods and her determination to prove her martial superiority. This focus gave the sect a unique tactical advantage against one of the most powerful orthodox factions while also limiting its broader martial development.
Sect rules and traditions
The sacred vow
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s most distinctive tradition centers on the sacred vow that all female members must take upon joining the sect. This vow requires absolute commitment to remaining within the tomb’s confines, renouncing all contact with the outside world unless specific conditions are met. The vow reflects Lin Chaoying’s philosophy that emotional attachment leads to suffering and that true martial excellence requires complete dedication and isolation.
The conditions for breaking this vow are deliberately extreme and romantic in nature: only if a man who knows nothing of the sect’s rules willingly sacrifices his life for a sect member can that member be released from her obligations. This provision reflects Lin’s belief that genuine love requires the ultimate sacrifice and that such devotion would prove worthy of breaking the sect’s isolation.
The vow system also serves practical defensive purposes, ensuring that sect secrets remain protected and that members develop the emotional detachment necessary for mastering the sect’s advanced techniques. The psychological discipline required to maintain this isolation contributes significantly to the exceptional mental fortitude demonstrated by successful Ancient Tomb practitioners.
Daily practices and discipline
Life within the Ancient Tomb Sect follows the “Twelve Less, Twelve More” regimen established by Lin Chaoying for optimal health and martial development:
Twelve Less:
- Less thinking, less worrying, less laughing, less speaking
- Less happiness, less anger, less sadness, less fear
- Less love, less hate, less seeking, less desiring
Twelve More:
- More sitting, more lying, more walking, more standing
- More inhaling, more exhaling, more reading, more writing
- More drumming (the qin), more chess, more calligraphy, more painting
This regimen emphasizes emotional regulation, physical discipline, and cultural refinement while supporting the internal energy cultivation necessary for advanced martial arts practice. The structure provides psychological stability for practitioners living in isolation while developing the mental clarity required for complex combat techniques.
Succession and leadership
The Ancient Tomb Sect follows a direct succession system where leadership passes from master to chosen disciple based on martial achievement and character rather than bloodline or seniority. Each generation typically consists of only one or two practitioners, ensuring intensive personal instruction and close maintenance of sect traditions.
The selection process emphasizes not only martial potential but also the psychological resilience necessary for life in isolation and the emotional discipline required for mastering techniques that demand precise mental control. Leaders must demonstrate mastery of the complete martial arts curriculum while maintaining the sect’s secrecy and independence.
Succession ceremonies involve formal transmission of the Jade Maiden Heart Sutra and other core texts, along with detailed instruction in the tomb’s defensive mechanisms and the sect’s historical traditions. The new leader assumes responsibility for maintaining the tomb’s facilities and continuing the sect’s martial development.
Martial arts and techniques
The Jade Maiden Heart Sutra
The Jade Maiden Heart Sutra represents the Ancient Tomb Sect’s supreme martial arts manual, created by Lin Chaoying specifically to counter Quanzhen Order techniques. This revolutionary text documents fighting methods that exploit the weaknesses and predictable patterns in orthodox Quanzhen martial arts, providing practitioners with devastating advantages against even highly skilled Quanzhen disciples.
The manual’s most remarkable feature is its requirement for paired practice between male and female practitioners, reflecting Lin’s original intention that she and Wang Chongyang would eventually practice together. The techniques achieve their full potential only when performed by partners who can coordinate their movements with perfect synchronization, creating combat combinations impossible for single practitioners.
Advanced sections of the Sutra require practitioners to train while wearing minimal clothing in open spaces, a practice designed to prevent qi deviations while enhancing the sensitivity necessary for perfect coordination. This unconventional training method reflects the sect’s willingness to abandon social conventions in pursuit of martial excellence.
Signature fighting techniques
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s martial arts curriculum encompasses several distinctive fighting systems:
Jade Maiden Swordplay (玉女剑法): An elegant sword style emphasizing speed, precision, and unpredictable attack patterns. The techniques appear almost dance-like in their fluid grace while delivering devastating strikes that exploit opponents’ defensive assumptions.
Beautiful Lady Fist (美女拳法): A hand-to-hand combat system incorporating feminine grace with deadly efficiency. The style uses apparent weakness and vulnerability to lure opponents into overcommitting to attacks, then exploits their exposed positions with counterstrikes.
Jade Bee Needles (玉蜂针): Specialized projectile weapons and techniques using small needles with exceptional accuracy and speed. The sect maintains colonies of jade bees whose sting provides natural poison for the needles, making even minor wounds potentially fatal.
Ice Soul Silver Needles (冰魄银针): Advanced projectile techniques employing silver needles chilled to extremely low temperatures. The combination of physical penetration and thermal shock makes these weapons particularly effective against opponents with strong defensive capabilities.
Internal energy cultivation
The sect’s internal energy practices emphasize coolness, tranquility, and emotional detachment as the foundation for advanced martial development. Unlike orthodox schools that focus on accumulating yang energy, Ancient Tomb practitioners cultivate yin energy that enhances speed, flexibility, and sensitivity while maintaining psychological equilibrium.
The Cold Jade Bed serves as the centerpiece of internal cultivation, providing an ideal environment for meditation and energy circulation. The bed’s natural cooling properties help practitioners maintain the low body temperature essential for advanced techniques while accelerating healing and reducing the risk of qi deviations.
Advanced practitioners develop the ability to circulate internal energy in reverse patterns compared to orthodox methods, providing natural resistance to certain attacks while enabling techniques that appear to violate normal martial arts principles. This unorthodox approach gives sect members significant advantages against opponents trained in conventional methods.
Generational development
First generation: Lin Chaoying
Lin Chaoying, the sect’s founder and first leader, established all the fundamental traditions and techniques that would define the organization for generations. Her exceptional martial talent, combined with intimate knowledge of Wang Chongyang’s fighting methods, enabled her to create a comprehensive martial arts system specifically designed to counter the most advanced orthodox techniques.
Her development of the Jade Maiden Heart Sutra represented a revolutionary approach to martial arts that challenged conventional assumptions about training methods, partner coordination, and the relationship between emotional state and combat effectiveness. Her innovations influenced martial arts development far beyond the sect’s own practitioners.
Lin’s personal tragedy provided the emotional foundation for the sect’s philosophy, but her intellectual brilliance ensured that this philosophy translated into practical advantages rather than mere sentiment. Her legacy established the Ancient Tomb Sect as a force capable of challenging much larger and more established organizations through superior technique and strategic thinking.
Second generation: Lin Chaoying’s maid
Lin Chaoying’s loyal maid became the sect’s second leader, inheriting both the martial arts knowledge and the responsibility for maintaining the tomb’s operations. Her steady leadership provided continuity during the transition from the founder’s era while successfully training the third generation despite the challenges of the sect’s isolation.
Her most significant contribution was the successful integration of Li Mochou and Xiaolongnü into the sect’s traditions, despite their very different personalities and aptitudes. Her teaching methods balanced the sect’s demanding technical requirements with the emotional support necessary for young practitioners living in such an unusual environment.
Her tragic death during Ouyang Feng’s invasion of the tomb demonstrated both the vulnerabilities inherent in the sect’s isolation and the fierce loyalty that characterized its members. Her final actions in protecting the sect’s secrets and ensuring the proper succession to Xiaolongnü preserved the organization during its most dangerous crisis.
Third generation: Xiaolongnü and Li Mochou
The third generation represented both the sect’s greatest triumph and its most serious internal crisis. Xiaolongnü embodied the ideal Ancient Tomb practitioner: supremely skilled, emotionally disciplined, and completely dedicated to the sect’s traditions until her encounter with Yang Guo challenged everything she had been taught about isolation and emotional detachment.
Li Mochou, known throughout the jianghu as the “Scarlet Serpent Fairy,” represented the dangers inherent in the sect’s extreme emotional discipline when that discipline breaks down. Her expulsion from the sect for refusing to accept its restrictions led to years of violent revenge against the outside world, demonstrating how the sect’s intensity could produce both exceptional heroes and dangerous villains.
The contrast between these two disciples highlighted the importance of emotional balance in the sect’s training. Xiaolongnü’s eventual ability to maintain her martial excellence while embracing love provided a new model for sect development, while Li Mochou’s destructive path illustrated the consequences of incomplete emotional integration.
Fourth generation: Yang Guo and beyond
Yang Guo’s admission to the sect as its first male student represented a revolutionary departure from centuries of tradition. His relationship with Xiaolongnü challenged fundamental assumptions about the sect’s isolation while proving that the martial arts techniques could be successfully adapted to male practitioners without losing their essential characteristics.
Yang Guo’s development of new techniques that integrated Ancient Tomb methods with his own innovations demonstrated how the sect’s martial arts could evolve while maintaining their core principles. His mastery of the complete Jade Maiden Heart Sutra with Xiaolongnü validated Lin Chaoying’s original vision of paired practice while adapting it to circumstances she had never envisioned.
The sect’s later influence through the mysterious Yellow-Shirted Woman in The Heavenly Sword and the Dragon Sabre suggests that Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü successfully established a continuing lineage that maintained the sect’s traditions while adapting to changing times and circumstances.
Relationships with other factions
Rivalry with Quanzhen Order
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s relationship with the Quanzhen Order represents one of the most complex factional dynamics in the jianghu, combining personal history, martial philosophy, and tactical considerations in ways that influenced both organizations profoundly.
The rivalry originated with Lin Chaoying and Wang Chongyang’s failed romance but evolved into a broader conflict between different approaches to martial arts and spiritual development. While Quanzhen emphasized orthodox techniques and emotional discipline through religious devotion, the Ancient Tomb Sect pursued excellence through isolation and the perfection of techniques specifically designed to exploit orthodox weaknesses.
This tactical asymmetry gave Ancient Tomb practitioners significant advantages in direct confrontations with Quanzhen disciples, as demonstrated repeatedly when sect members encountered Quanzhen practitioners. However, the Quanzhen Order’s much larger size and broader influence limited the practical impact of these individual victories.
The relationship between Yang Guo and various Quanzhen masters illustrated both the potential for reconciliation and the persistent tensions that made such reconciliation difficult. Yang’s complex history with the order—as both victim of persecution and beneficiary of some masters’ kindness—reflected the broader ambiguity in the factions’ relationship.
Alliance with Xiangyang defenders
During the Mongol invasions that threatened Chinese independence, the Ancient Tomb Sect abandoned its traditional isolation to support the Xiangyang Defense Coalition. This alliance represented a fundamental shift in sect philosophy, as Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü chose patriotic duty over sectarian isolation.
Their participation in Xiangyang’s defense demonstrated how the sect’s unique martial arts could contribute to larger strategic goals while maintaining their distinctive character. The sect’s exceptional individual combat capabilities provided crucial advantages during key battles, particularly when facing Mongol champions whose techniques differed significantly from traditional Chinese martial arts.
The alliance also provided opportunities for the sect to share martial knowledge with other factions while learning from their approaches to combat and organization. This exchange enriched the sect’s techniques while demonstrating how isolation, while preserving purity, could also limit development.
Interactions with other martial arts schools
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s encounters with various other martial arts schools throughout its history revealed both the advantages and limitations of its specialized approach. Against orthodox Chinese schools, the sect’s anti-Quanzhen techniques often proved surprisingly effective, as many orthodox styles shared similar theoretical foundations.
However, confrontations with unorthodox practitioners and foreign martial artists revealed areas where the sect’s narrow focus created vulnerabilities. These experiences encouraged later practitioners to develop broader technical repertoires while maintaining their core advantages.
The sect’s reputation for producing exceptional individual fighters while maintaining strict secrecy created a mystique that influenced how other factions approached potential conflicts. Many organizations preferred to avoid confrontation rather than test their techniques against opponents whose capabilities remained largely unknown.
The Tomb of the Living Dead
Architectural features
The Tomb of the Living Dead represents one of the most sophisticated underground complexes in the martial arts world, combining military engineering with living accommodation in ways that perfectly supported the sect’s unique needs and philosophy.
The tomb’s entrance mechanisms provide multiple layers of security, including hidden passages, mechanical traps, and conventional barriers that can be activated independently or in combination. These features enable inhabitants to control access precisely while maintaining emergency escape routes if defensive measures fail.
Internal chambers serve specialized functions: meditation halls with optimal acoustics and lighting, training areas with appropriate space and equipment, living quarters designed for long-term habitation, and storage facilities for martial arts texts, weapons, and supplies. The integration of these functions creates a self-sufficient environment capable of supporting extended isolation.
The tomb’s most famous feature, the Cold Jade Bed, occupies a central chamber specifically designed to enhance its natural properties. The bed’s therapeutic and cultivation benefits made it essential for the sect’s martial arts development while providing crucial medical support for practitioners living in challenging conditions.
Defensive capabilities
The tomb’s defensive systems reflect Wang Chongyang’s military expertise combined with subsequent improvements made by sect members over the generations. The complex can withstand siege warfare while providing inhabitants with multiple options for response depending on the nature and scale of threats.
Mechanical defenses include pressure-activated traps, collapsing passages, and projectile systems that can be triggered remotely or automatically. These systems provide force multiplication that enables a small number of defenders to hold off much larger attacking forces while conserving energy for extended conflicts.
Environmental defenses take advantage of the underground location and natural features to create additional obstacles for intruders. Controlled flooding, gas traps, and maze-like passages can disorient and exhaust attackers while providing defenders with tactical advantages based on superior knowledge of the terrain.
The ultimate defensive measure involves sealing the tomb completely using the “断龙石” (Dragon-Breaking Stone), a massive barrier that can lock the complex from inside. While this measure provides absolute security, it also creates the risk of permanent entrapment, making it truly a last resort option.
Living environment
Despite its defensive purposes, the tomb provides a surprisingly comfortable living environment that supports both daily life and intensive martial arts training. The complex’s design incorporates natural air circulation, lighting from hidden sources, and temperature regulation that maintains comfortable conditions year-round.
Living quarters include private chambers for individual meditation and rest, common areas for shared activities, and specialized spaces for different aspects of sect life. The integration of practical and spiritual functions creates an environment where inhabitants can maintain both physical health and psychological well-being during extended isolation.
The tomb’s isolation from external weather and seasonal changes creates a timeless environment that supports the psychological detachment emphasized by sect philosophy. This separation from normal temporal rhythms helps practitioners achieve the mental states necessary for advanced martial arts while reducing the psychological stress of long-term confinement.
Legacy and influence
Impact on martial arts development
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s most significant contribution to martial arts development lies in its demonstration that specialized techniques designed to counter specific opponents could prove superior to more general approaches. This insight influenced tactical thinking throughout the jianghu, encouraging practitioners to develop more nuanced understanding of their potential adversaries.
The sect’s integration of paired practice into advanced martial arts challenged conventional assumptions about individual cultivation while demonstrating how cooperation could enhance rather than compromise personal martial development. This concept influenced training methods in other schools and contributed to broader evolution in martial arts pedagogy.
The sect’s emphasis on emotional integration rather than suppression provided an alternative to orthodox approaches that often ignored or minimized the role of emotions in martial arts development. This more holistic approach contributed to deeper understanding of the psychological foundations of advanced martial performance.
Cultural significance
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s story embodies themes of love, loss, dedication, and transformation that resonate far beyond martial arts contexts. Lin Chaoying’s creation of the sect from personal tragedy demonstrates how individual pain can be transformed into lasting achievement, while Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü’s relationship shows how love can transcend even the most restrictive traditions.
The sect’s eventual emergence from isolation to support national defense illustrates how personal development and broader social responsibility can be integrated. This evolution from self-centered cultivation to socially engaged action reflects broader themes in Chinese culture about the relationship between individual excellence and collective welfare.
The sect’s survival and adaptation across multiple generations demonstrates the resilience of institutions founded on solid principles while remaining flexible enough to evolve with changing circumstances. This balance between tradition and innovation provides lessons relevant to many aspects of cultural development.
Literary and artistic influence
The Ancient Tomb Sect has become one of the most recognizable and influential factions in Chinese popular culture, inspiring countless adaptations, imitations, and variations across different media. The sect’s distinctive visual elements—underground settings, elegant martial arts, and romantic themes—have established conventions that continue to influence martial arts fiction.
The relationship between Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü has become an archetypal example of forbidden love transcending social boundaries, influencing romantic fiction far beyond the martial arts genre. Their story demonstrates how individual relationships can challenge and ultimately transform institutional traditions.
The sect’s combination of martial excellence with emotional depth has influenced character development in numerous subsequent works, encouraging creators to develop more psychologically complex protagonists who combine physical prowess with genuine emotional sophistication.
Behind the scenes
The Ancient Tomb Sect represents Jin Yong’s exploration of how personal tragedy can be transformed into lasting achievement and how individual relationships can transcend seemingly insurmountable social barriers. The sect’s unique characteristics—from its underground location to its specialized martial arts—reflect the author’s interest in creating factions that challenge conventional assumptions while maintaining internal consistency.
Literary themes and symbolism
The sect’s underground existence serves multiple symbolic functions within Jin Yong’s narrative framework. The tomb represents both death and rebirth, isolation and protection, tradition and innovation. Lin Chaoying’s transformation of Wang Chongyang’s military facility into a martial arts school symbolizes how old purposes can be adapted to new needs while maintaining essential structural elements.
The sect’s emphasis on pairs and partnerships, from Lin’s original intention to practice with Wang through Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü’s eventual success, reflects Jin Yong’s broader themes about the importance of human connections in achieving individual excellence. The sect’s ultimate emergence from isolation to serve larger purposes demonstrates how personal development can contribute to social benefit.
The contrast between the sect’s small size and its significant influence illustrates Jin Yong’s interest in how quality can triumph over quantity and how intensive cultivation can produce results that extensive organization cannot match. This theme appears throughout his work but finds particularly clear expression in the Ancient Tomb Sect’s story.
Character development and relationships
Jin Yong uses the Ancient Tomb Sect to explore how institutional traditions interact with individual personalities and how rigid systems can be transformed through genuine human relationships. The sect’s evolution from Lin Chaoying’s isolation through Yang Guo and Xiaolongnü’s integration demonstrates how love can transcend rather than merely break traditional boundaries.
The contrast between Li Mochou’s destructive rebellion and Yang Guo’s transformative influence illustrates different approaches to challenging tradition. Li’s violent rejection of sect rules creates only destruction, while Yang’s integration of respect for tradition with personal independence creates positive change for everyone involved.
The sect’s unique training methods provide opportunities for character development that would be impossible in conventional settings. The intensity of isolated practice, the psychological challenges of underground living, and the technical demands of specialized martial arts create circumstances that reveal character while fostering growth.
Historical and cultural context
The Ancient Tomb Sect reflects Jin Yong’s sophisticated understanding of Chinese cultural values and his ability to create fictional institutions that feel authentic within their historical context. The sect’s emphasis on loyalty, dedication, and technical excellence resonates with traditional Chinese values while its innovative approaches reflect contemporary interests in individual development.
The sect’s relationship with the Quanzhen Order provides a framework for exploring tensions between different approaches to spiritual and martial development that have characterized Chinese culture throughout its history. The contrast between orthodox and unorthodox methods reflects broader cultural debates about tradition and innovation.
The sect’s eventual participation in national defense connects personal cultivation with patriotic duty in ways that reflect fundamental Chinese cultural assumptions about the relationship between individual excellence and social responsibility. This integration provides resolution for the tension between self-development and social engagement that appears throughout Jin Yong’s work.
Martial arts philosophy
The Ancient Tomb Sect’s unique martial arts reflect Jin Yong’s interest in how technical innovation can emerge from personal motivation and how specialized knowledge can provide advantages over more general approaches. The sect’s anti-Quanzhen techniques demonstrate how deep understanding of opponents can be more valuable than superior raw power.
The sect’s emphasis on paired practice explores themes about cooperation and competition that extend far beyond martial arts contexts. Lin Chaoying’s original vision of practicing with Wang Chongyang reflects assumptions about how partnerships can enhance individual achievement while creating results impossible for solitary practitioners.
The integration of emotional and technical development in sect training reflects Jin Yong’s broader philosophy about the artificial nature of distinctions between different aspects of human development. The sect’s approach suggests that genuine martial excellence requires psychological sophistication and emotional maturity as well as technical skill.
Portrayals
The Ancient Tomb Sect has been portrayed in numerous television and film adaptations of The Return of the Condor Heroes:
The Return of the Condor Heroes
- 1976 series – Featured the sect’s mysterious underground setting
- 1983 series – Emphasized the romantic elements of the sect’s story
- 1995 series – Detailed portrayal of the tomb’s architecture and defenses
- 1998 series – Focused on the sect’s unique martial arts
- 2006 series – Modern interpretation with enhanced visual effects
- 2014 series – Contemporary adaptation with updated staging
The Heavenly Sword and the Dragon Sabre
- Various adaptations feature the mysterious Yellow-Shirted Woman as a representative of the sect’s continuing lineage
Most adaptations emphasize the sect’s romantic elements and unique underground setting while showcasing the elegant martial arts that distinguish its practitioners from other factions.
External links
- Ancient Tomb Sect on Wikipedia
- 古墓派 on Baidu Baike
Footnotes
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江湖 – jiānghú. The world of martial arts. A sub-society involving all who are related to the martial arts scene. What is jianghu? ↩