Education
He was Wang Maozhai"s primary disciple and studied with him from 1916 to 1940.
He was Wang Maozhai"s primary disciple and studied with him from 1916 to 1940.
He began training in martial arts from the age of nine. He had a number of masters and learned Tan Tui, changquan, xingyiquan, baguazhang and Wu-style t"ai chi ch"uan. He reformed his Wu-style training to make it more systematic and standardised the Wu-style t"ai chi he had learned from Wang Maozhai.
After his death he became the leader of the Wu-style Beijing group.
Wang Pei-sheng, Li Jing-wu and Li Bing-ci were all his students. Wu-style was created by a Manchurian named Wu Ch"uan-yu (1834–1902).
Wu Ch"uan-yu’s son, Wu Chien-ch"uan (1870–1942), loved martial arts from his youth and studied under the tutorship of his father. After 1912 he continuously developed the teaching Tai Chi Chuan at the Beijing Sport Research Society, gradually refining his father’s style.