Wu Yen-hsia

Wu Yen-hsia or Wu Yanxia (1930–2001) was a Chinese t'ai chi ch'uan teacher of Manchu ancestry.

吳雁霞
Wu Yen-hsia
Born1930 (1930)
Died2001 (aged 7071)
NationalityChinese
StyleWu-style taijiquan
Wu Yen-hsia
Traditional Chinese

Biography

She was the daughter of Wu Kung-i (1900-1970) from whom she learned t'ai chi. She also helped in the teaching of her father's students. Wu Yen-hsia was the younger sister of Wu Ta-k'uei and Wu Ta-ch'i, and married Kuo Hsiao-chung, who was also a disciple of her father. She held the position of senior instructor of the Wu family from 1996 to her death in 2001 and was succeeded by her cousin Wu Ta-hsin.[1]

Wu Yen-hsia moved to Hong Kong from Shanghai in 1948. In an interview late in her life, she mentioned that she had often seconded her older brother Wu Ta-k'uei at his many challenge fights in those years. She mentioned applying first aid to any injuries resulting from the fights, and she was "fearful that someone would be killed and there would be big trouble for the family" because her brother was "young and overly fierce".[2]

She attended to the affairs of the Chien-ch'uan Tai Chi Chuan Association while training her students and disciples.[3] She became known as a specialist with the t'ai chi sword and t'ai chi spear.[4]

gollark: Fission is bettr.
gollark: Just use orbital bombardment on your foolish slave armies.
gollark: Puny human tech *is* more efficient than evolved stuff in some ways.
gollark: Photosynthesis has a tenth of the efficiency of average solar panels.
gollark: People in companies aren't *literal slaves*, they have waaay more freedom and such.

See also

References

  1. Cai, Naibiao (2006). "In Memory of Wu Daxin". Journal of Asian Martial Arts. Erie, Pennsylvania USA: Via Media Publishing. 15 (1). ISSN 1057-8358.
  2. Yip, Y. L. (Autumn 2002). "Pivot". Qi: The Journal of Traditional Eastern Health and Fitness. Insight Graphics Publishers. 12 (3). ISSN 1056-4004.
  3. Yip, Y. L. (Autumn 2002). "Pivot". Qi: The Journal of Traditional Eastern Health and Fitness. Insight Graphics Publishers. 12 (3). ISSN 1056-4004.
  4. 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.
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