Essentials: kick the left foot about 75 centimeters in front of you (leg straight, toes down, palms parallel to the ground, about 25 centimeters from the ground), and exert appropriate force to make the whole foot land on the ground, and at the same time shift the center of gravity of the body forward, and then move the right foot accordingly; the upper body is straight and slightly leaning forward; hands gently clasped together, with the thumbs sticking to the second section of the index finger; when swinging the arm forward, elbow bent, little arm slightly horizontal, palms inward a little down, and wrist lower edge swung to about 10 centimeters above the bottom button (in summer dress). When swinging the arm forward, the elbow is bent, the lower arm is slightly horizontal, the palm of the hand is slightly inward, and the lower edge of the wrist is swung to a point about 10 centimeters above the lowest button of the shirt (in summer uniform, about the same height as the third button of the shirt; in winter uniform, about the same height as the fourth button of the shirt; and in sailor uniform, the upper edge of the wrist is about 15 centimeters away from the corner of the neckline), and about 10 centimeters away from the body. Traveling speed 110-116 steps per minute.
Historical Development
Forward march is a kind of marching pace of the army or other organization's formation marching, which in English is called goose_ stapping which means goose step. It is characterized by a high legged forward stride like that of a goose. This English term was first used in 1806. However, goose_stapping is not the original name of goose_striding. The original name for the goose-step comes from the German word for "parade step" (Paradeschritt). It originated as a folk dance in medieval Europe, characterized by a 90-degree kick with the thigh straight forward (traces of which can still be seen in today's Irish kicking dance).
From the seventeenth century, it was popularized in Prussia.
In the mid-eighteenth century, it was Friedrich the Great who pioneered the use of this marching step in folk dances in Prussian army parades, formally known as the march. Thereafter, spread by Prussian (and later German) military instructors, the march gradually spread to other countries, including South American countries such as Chile and Argentina, where Hitler pioneered the Prussian Army's march in the 1920s in the Nazi Party storm troopers.
After coming to power in Germany in 1933, Hitler popularized the march as the official footwork of the Nazi Party Guard and Wehrmacht.
In 1937, during a visit to Berlin, Mussolini admired Nazi Germany's march, and on his return decided, as a step towards Italy's convergence with Germany, to officially implement the march in the Italian Army and the Italian Fascist Party. Thousands of people in the square march because of the neat and tidy action of strong and powerful, magnificent, and therefore has a strong shock and show off the effect.
In 1950, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) marched through Tiananmen Square for the first time.