- Yang
Banhou (Yang Pan-hou; 1837–1890) was an
influential teacher of tai chi in Qing
dynasty China,
known for his
bellicose temperament. He was the eldest...
- by Yang Luchan's son, Yang
Banhou, or no
later than the
first decade of the
twentieth century by one or more of Yang
Banhou's disciples. By the
second decade...
- are
saved by a knight,
Banhou who
tells them that
Suneo is in
their capital Enriru. They go to the
capital and find Suneo.
Banhou tells them that their...
- students. 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...
- arts by his father, Wu Quanyou, a
senior student of Yang Luchan, and Yang
Banhou. Both Wu
Jianquan and his
father were
hereditary Manchu cavalry officers...
- live to maturity, Yang
Banhou (1837–1890), was also
retained as a
martial arts
instructor by the
Chinese Imperial family. Yang
Banhou became the
highest paid...
- twenty-fourth
chapter of the "Forty Chapter" tai chi
classic that Yang
Banhou gave to Wu
Quanyou says the
following about the
connect between tai chi...
- live to maturity, Yang
Banhou, who was also
retained as a
martial arts
instructor by the
Chinese Imperial family. Yang
Banhou's first student was Wu Quanyou...
- Ping Yang tai chi. Yang
Luchan taught his son, Yang
Banhou, the
Guang Ping Yang tai chi. Yang
Banhou was
reportedly the
official teacher for the Imperial...
-
likely also
shared his
writings with Yang Luchan, and with Yang's son Yang
Banhou, who Wu
tutored (probably in
literacy as well as tai chi).
Although the...