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Wu-style tai chi





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Wu-style tai chi (Chinese: 吳氏太极拳; pinyin: Wúshì tàijíquán) is one of the five main styles of tai chi. It is second in popularity after Yang-style,[1] and the fourth-oldest of the five major tai chi styles.[2] It was developed by Wu Quanyou and Wu Jianquan.

Wu-style tai chi
吳氏太極拳
Also known asNg-style tai chi
Date foundedlate 19th century
Country of originChina
FounderWu Jianquan
Current headWu Kuang-yu
5th gen. Wu
Arts taughtTai chi
Ancestor artsYang-style tai chi
PractitionersWu Quanyou,
Wu Gongyi,
Ma Yueliang,
Wu Yanxia
Official websiteWuStyle.com

History

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Wu Quanyou was a military officer cadet of Manchu ancestry in the Yellow Banner camp (see Qing Dynasty Military) in the Forbidden City, Beijing and also a hereditary officer of the Imperial Guards Brigade.[3] At that time, Yang Luchan was the martial arts instructor in the Imperial Guards, teaching tai chi, and in 1850 Wu Quanyou became one of his students.[2]

In 1870, Wu Jianquan was asked to become the senior disciple of Yang Banhou, Yang Luchan's oldest adult son, and an instructor as well to the Manchu military.[4][2] Wu Quanyou had three primary disciples: his son Wu Jianquan, Wang Maozhai and Guo Fen.[5]

Wu Quanyou's son, Wu Jianquan, grandsons Wu Gongyi and Wu Kung-tsao, and granddaughter Wu Yinghua were well-known teachers.[3]

Wu Jianquan became the most widely known teacher in his family, and is therefore considered the co-founder of the Wu style by his family and their students.[6] He taught large numbers of people and his refinements to the art more clearly distinguish Wu style from Yang style training.[6]

Wu Jianquan moved his family south from Beijing (where an important school founded by other students of his father is headquartered, popularly known as the Northern Wu style) to Shanghai in 1928, where he founded the Jianquan Taijiquan Association (鑑泉太極拳社) in 1935.[3]

Wu Gongyi then moved the family headquarters to Hong Kong in 1948, while His younger sister Wu Yinghua and her husband Ma Yueliang stayed behind to manage the original Shanghai school.[7]

Between 1983 and her death in 1996 Wu Yinghua was the highest-ranked instructor in the Wu family system. Her descendants continue teaching and today manage the Shanghai school as well as schools in Europe:

Wu Gongyi's children were also full-time martial art teachers:

Tai chi lineage tree with Wu-style focus

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Note:


  • t
  • e
  • Key:NEIJIA
    Solid linesDirect teacher-student.
    Dot linesPartial influence
    /taught informally
    /limited time.
    TAI CHI
    Dash linesIndividual(s) omitted.
    Dash crossBranch continues.CHEN-STYLEZhaobao-style
    YANG-STYLE
    (王蘭亭)
    Wang Lanting
    1840–?
    2nd gen. Yang
    Yang Jianhou
    1839–1917
    2nd gen. Yang
    2nd gen. Yangjia Michuan
    Yang Banhou
    1837–1892
    2nd gen. Yang
    2nd gen.
    Guang Ping Yang
    Yang Small Frame
    WU (HAO)-STYLEZhaobao He-style
    Li-styleYang Shao-hou
    1862–1930
    3rd gen. Yang
    Yang Small Frame
    Wu Quanyou
    1834–1902
    1st gen. Wu
    (齊閣臣)
    Qi Gechen
    2nd gen. Wu
    (夏公甫)
    Xia Gongfu
    2nd gen. Wu
    Wu Jianquan
    1870–1942
    2nd gen. Wu
    WU-STYLE
    108 Form
    (常遠亭)
    Chang Yuanting
    1860–1918
    2nd gen. Wu
    (郭松亭)
    Guo Songting
    2nd gen. Wu
    Wang Maozhai
    1862–1940
    2nd gen. Wu
    SUN-STYLE
    Dong Yingjie
    1891–1960
    4th gen. Yang
    (齊敏軒)
    Qi Minxuan
    3rd gen. Wu
    Cheng Wing Kwong
    1903–1967
    3rd gen. Wu
    Wu Yinghua
    1907–1997
    3rd gen. Wu
    Wu Gongyi
    1900–1970
    3rd gen. Wu
    Wu Kung-tsao
    1903–1983
    3rd gen. Wu
    Ma Yueliang
    1901–1998
    3rd gen. Wu
    Yang Yuting
    1887–1982
    3rd gen. Wu
    (鄭天熊)
    Cheng Tin Hung
    1930–2005
    Wudang-style
    Wu Ta-k'uei
    1923–1972
    4th gen. Wu
    Wu Yanxia
    1930–2001
    4th gen. Wu
    Wu Daxin
    1933–2005
    4th gen. Wu
    (立群)
    Li Liqun
    1924–2013
    4th gen. Wu
    Wang Peisheng
    1919–2004
    4th gen. Wu
    Wu Kuang-yu
    1946–Present
    5th gen. Wu
    (骆舒焕)
    Luo Shuhuan
    1935–1987
    5th gen. Wu
    CHEN-STYLEYANG-STYLEWU-STYLESUN-STYLEWU (HAO)-STYLE

    Training

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    The Wu style's distinctive hand form, pushing hands and weapons trainings emphasize parallel footwork and horse stance training with the feet relatively closer together than the modern Yang or Chen styles, small circle hand techniques (although large circle techniques are trained as well) and differs from the other tai chi family styles martially with Wu style's initial focus on grappling, throws (Shuai jiao), tumbling, jumping, footsweeps, pressure point leverage and joint locks and breaks, which are trained in addition to more conventional tai chi sparring and fencing at advanced levels.[6]

    Generational senior instructors of the Wu family tai chi schools

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    1st Generation

    2nd generation

    3rd Generation

    4th Generation

    5th Generation

    See also

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    References

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    1. ^ Yip, Y. L. (Autumn 2002). "Pivot". Qi: The Journal of Traditional Eastern Health and Fitness. 12 (3). Insight Graphics Publishers. ISSN 1056-4004.
  • ^ a b c Wile, Douglas (1995). Lost T'ai-chi Classics from the Late Ch'ing Dynasty (Chinese Philosophy and Culture). State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0791426548.
  • ^ a b c Wu, Kung-tsao (2006) [1980]. Wu Family T'ai Chi Ch'uan (吳家太極拳). Chien-ch’uan T’ai-chi Ch’uan Association. ISBN 0-9780499-0-X.
  • ^ a b Yip, Y. L. (Autumn 1998). "A Perspective on the Development of Taijiquan". Qi: The Journal of Traditional Eastern Health and Fitness. 8 (3). Insight Graphics Publishers. ISSN 1056-4004.
  • ^ Zhang, Tina (2006). Classical Northern Wu Style Tai Ji Quan. Berkeley, California: Blue Snake Books. ISBN 978-1583941546.
  • ^ a b c Philip-Simpson, Margaret (June 1995). "A Look at Wu Style Teaching Methods". T'AI CHI the International Magazine of T'ai Chi Ch'uan. 19 (3). Wayfarer Publications. ISSN 0730-1049.
  • ^ Li, Liqun (October 1998). "A Remembrance of Ma Yueh-liang". T'AI CHI the International Magazine of T'ai Chi Ch'uan. 22 (5). Wayfarer Publications. ISSN 0730-1049.
  • ^ Cai, Naibiao (2006). "In Memory of Wu Daxin". Journal of Asian Martial Arts. 15 (1). Via Media Publishing. ISSN 1057-8358.
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wu-style_tai_chi&oldid=1164887410"
     



    Last edited on 11 July 2023, at 17:54  





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    This page was last edited on 11 July 2023, at 17:54 (UTC).

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