Yang Chengfu
Yang Chengfu 杨澄甫 | |
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(王永泉) |
Yang Chengfu | |
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Hanyu Pinyin | Yáng Chéngfǔ |
Wade–Giles | Yang2 Chʻeng2fu3 |
IPA | [jǎŋ ʈʂʰə̌ŋfù] |
Yue: Cantonese | |
Yale Romanization | Yeùhng chìhng fú |
Jyutping | Joeng4 cing4 fu2 |
IPA | [jœ̏ːŋ tɕʰɪ̏ŋ fǔː] |
Southern Min | |
Hokkien POJ | IûⁿTêng-po͘ |
Yang Chengfu (1883–1936) was one of the best known teachers of Yang-style tai chi. He helped develop the art into its modern form. His students would go on to found successful martial arts schools of their own and helped spread Yang-style tai chi around the world.
Biography
Yang Chengfu was born into the famous Yang family of tai chi practitioners, the son of Yang Jianhou and grandson of Yang Luchan. With his older brother Yang Shaohou and colleagues Wu Jianquan and Sun Lutang, he was among the first teachers to offer tai chi instruction to the general public at the Beijing Physical Culture Research Institute from 1914 until 1928. He moved to Shanghai in 1928.
Chengfu is known for having "smoothed" out the somewhat more vigorous training routine he learned from his family as well as emphasising a "large frame" (大架; dà jià) with expansive movements in stepping and using large circular motions with the arms. His smooth, evenly paced large frame form and its hundreds of offshoots has been the standard for Yang-style tai chi (and overwhelmingly in the public imagination for tai chi in general) ever since.
Chengfu is the official author of two books on the style, Application Methods of Tai Chi, published in 1931, and Essence and Applications of Tai Chi, published in 1934.[1][2] His second book was translated into English in 2005.[3]
Students and Descendants
His direct descendants, the many students he taught, and their students, have spread the art around the world. Among Yang Chengfu's students were famous masters such as
His sons have continued to teach their father's tai chi, including his first son, the late Yang Shouzhong (1910-1985), who brought Yang-style tai chi to Hong Kong, his second son Yang Zhenji (1921-2007), his third son, Yang Zhenduo (1926-2020), who lived in Shanxi Province, who was widely considered the most prominent of the Yang family tai chi instructors, and his fourth son, Yang Zhenguo, born in 1928, and living in Handan, Hebei.
Bibliography
- ^ Yang Chengfu (1931), Taijiquan Shiyongfa (Application methods of Taijiquan)
- ^ Yang Chengfu (1934), Taijiquan Tiyong Quanshu (Complete Book of the Essence and Applications of Taijiquan)
- ISBN 978-1-55643-545-4.