- of the five
major tai chi styles. It was
developed by Wu
Quanyou and Wu Jianquan. Wu
Quanyou was a
military officer cadet of
Manchu ancestry in the Yellow...
- Wu
Quanyou (Chinese: 吴全佑; Wade–Giles: Wu Ch‘üan-yu; 1834–1902) was an
influential teacher of the tai chi
martial art in late
Imperial China. His son is...
- Fu
Quanyou (Chinese: 傅全有; pinyin: Fù
Quányǒu; born
November 1930) is a
retired general of the People's
Republic of China. Fu was born in Guo
County (now...
-
Republican China. Wu
Jianquan was
taught martial arts by his father, Wu
Quanyou, a
senior student of Yang Luchan, and Yang Banhou. Both Wu
Jianquan and...
-
famous tai chi
masters (see
lineage diagram),
including Yang Banhou, Wu
Quanyou, Wu Jianquan,
Cheng Wing Kwong, Chen
Gengyun (陳耕雲) and Wang
Lanting (王蘭亭)...
-
Taizu of Song Yue Fei Hong
Xiguan Dong
Haichuan Yang
Luchan Chan
Heung Wu
Quanyou Wong Fei-hung Sun
Lutang Li
Shuwen Huo
Yuanjia Wang
Ziping Chen Fake Ip...
- Wu
Yuxiang (1812–1880) and Hao
Weizhen (1842–1920) Wu
style (吳氏) of Wu
Quanyou (1834–1902) and his son Wu
Jianquan (1870–1942) Sun
style (孫氏) of Sun Lutang...
- has
quotations related to Tai chi. Chen-style Yang-style Wu-style of Wu
Quanyou and Wu
Jianquan Wu or Wu/Hao-style of Wu
Yuxiang Sun-style
Yangjia Michuan-style...
-
Imperial Guards Imperial Guards (Tang dynasty)
Shuai jiao Wu Chien-ch'uan Wu
Quanyou Yang
Luchan Rawski 1998, p. 82.
Elliott 2001, p. 81. Elliott, Mark C. (2001)...
-
chapter of the "Forty Chapter" tai chi
classic that Yang
Banhou gave to Wu
Quanyou says the
following about the
connect between tai chi and spirituality:...