How many steps per minute for each of starting, marching, and running?

Flanking, traveling at 116 to 122 steps per minute. For the stride, the traveling speed is 110-116 steps per minute. Jogging, traveling at 170-180 steps per minute.

The march is a form of marching in a procession, which is intended to show military authority, but is time-consuming and labor-intensive to train, and is mainly used by soldiers marching in parades and other ceremonial occasions. The march was originally used by the Prussian army in parades in the mid-18th century. Today, the march varies from region to region, but the main features of the march are that each man stands upright with his upper body, his legs straight and his feet planted firmly on the ground, and the procession moves forward in unison, following a certain rhythm.

The standard posture of the PLA marching is the standard set by General Xiao Ke. 1950, according to the central government's request that the army should be unified in terms of command, system, establishment and discipline, Xiao Ke, then the minister of the military training department, organized the relevant personnel to prepare the three major orders of discipline, housekeeping and formation. The Three Orders were issued and implemented, providing a strong guarantee for the regularization of our army. To this day, the three major orders are still the basic basis for our army's rule by law.

Historical Development

Marching is a kind of marching pace of the army or other organizations, which is called goose_ stapping in English. 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, officially known as the square march. Thereafter, spread by Prussian (and later German) military instructors, the marching step was gradually spread to other countries, including South American countries such as Chile and Argentina.In the 1920s, Hitler pioneered the Prussian Army's marching step in the Nazi Party's stormtroopers.

After Hitler came to power in Germany in 1933, he popularized the march as the official footwork of the Nazi Party Guard and Wehrmacht.

In 1937, during a visit to Berlin, Mussolini, who had admired Nazi Germany's march, decided on his return to his home country to formally implement the march in the Italian army and the Italian Fascist Party, as a step in Italy's move toward Germany.

Thousands of people marching in formation as a result of the neat and tidy action of the powerful, majestic, and therefore has a strong shock and show off the effect of the Chinese People's Liberation Army in 1950 for the first time to use the march through Tiananmen Square.