Yang Banhou 楊班侯 | |
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Born | 1837 Guangfu, Yongnian, Hebei, China |
Died | 1890 (aged 52–53) |
Style | Yang-style tai chi |
Notable students |
Yang Shaohou Wu Quanyou Wang Jiaoyu (王矯宇) |
Yang Banhou | |||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 楊 班 侯 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 杨 班 侯 | ||||||||
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Part of a series on |
Chinese martial arts (Wushu) |
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Yang Banhou (Yang Pan-hou; 1837–1890) was an influential teacher of tai chi in Qing dynasty China, known for his bellicose temperament. [1] [2]
He was the senior son of Yang Luchan to survive to adulthood. Like his father, he was retained as a martial arts instructor by the Manchu imperial family. [2] [3] His disciple Wu Quanyou, a Manchu banner cavalry officer of the Palace Battalion, [2] and Wu Quanyou's son Wu Jianquan, also a banner officer, became co-founders of Wu-style tai chi. [3]
Yang Banhou's younger brother Yang Jianhou was a well known teacher of Yang-style tai chi as well. [2] Banhou adopted Jianhou's eldest son, Yang Shaohou, and put him through rigorous training. [4] Yang Banhou's son, Yang Shaopeng (1875–1938) was also a tai chi teacher. [3]
Yang Banhou taught Wang Jiaoyu his father's Guang Ping Yang tai chi form, and Wang taught Kuo Lien-ying this original Yang style form.[ citation needed]
Video: 5th Generation Master Jia Anshu (贾安树 1954– ) performing the Yang Yang Banhou Middle Frame, Large Frame, Fast Frame, 30 Cannon Fist, + 4 Cannon Fist + Liaokua Eight Trigrams Palm, and 30 Dao (saber) forms on YouTube