Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Yang Jwing Ming, author of Analysis of Shaolin Chin Na: instructor's Manual for all Martial Styles, states Zhou Tong taught Yue Fei "a complete system involving barehand combat, weapons, military tactics, horsemenship, archery, and other related subjects."
For instance, internalist Yang Jwing-Ming says Zhou was a scholar who studied martial arts in the Shaolin Monastery and later took Yue as his student after the young man worked as a tenant farmer for the official-general Han Qi (韓琦, 1008–1075). [41]
Shaolin Long Fist Kung Fu by Yang Jwing-Ming, ISBN 978-0-86568-020-3. Training book on Long Fist history, applications, and sequences. Training book on Long Fist history, applications, and sequences. Shaolin Long Fist
Founded by Yang Jwing-Ming, this school is rooted in the teaching of Li Mao-Ching, a grandmaster of longfist. The forms and techniques come directly from the Nanking Guoshu Institute, established by Chiang Kai-Shek.
The World Jianshu League (WJL, from Chinese jiàn shù 劍 術, "swordsmanship") is an organization dedicated to preserving the art of the jian, a traditional Chinese sword, through organized competition, discussion, and documentation.
During the 1980s and 1990s, Masich became a formal disciple of Yang Jwing Ming and Liang Shouyu. [4] As well he furthered his studies with Yang Zhen Duo , Chen Xiaowang and Jou Tsung Hwa. During this time he began teaching workshops and seminars in his native Canada and elsewhere.
Some claim the author of this qigong sequence to be Hua Tuo, however Yang Jwing-Ming suggests it was the Taoist Master Jiun Chiam and Huatuo merely perfected its application and passed it onto gifted disciples including Wu Pu, Fan E, and Li Dangzhi. [4] The five animals in the exercises are the tiger, deer, bear, monkey and crane.
Yang Jwing-Ming, who is not a practitioner of the art, argues that aspects of xingyiquan (particularly the animal styles) are identifiable as far back as the Liang dynasty at the Shaolin Temple. [7] According to Yang, Yue Fei therefore did not strictly invent xingyiquan , but synthesized and perfected existing Shaolin principles into his own ...