Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Inheritance of Shaolin King Kong Gate

Inheritance of Shaolin King Kong Gate

Liang, a native of Jixian County, Henan Province (now Weihui City), was born in June of the 28th year of Guangxu (1902) and died on March 24th of 1967. I studied martial arts with many famous Wushu teachers all my life, and regretted being robbed of property during the Cultural Revolution, plus 1950. Based on all kinds of information, the sources of Liang Lao's Shaolin Wushu are all family heirlooms, such as Liu Dekuan, the great-grandfather of Beijing Daqianliu, Liu Liuhe Gate of Shaolin (born in Wanlai), and Mr. Xiang, the bodyguard of a generation of fierce Yuan Shikai. Mr. Liang is also a descendant of the Eight Diagrams Palm and Wu Taiji. War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression served as the martial arts instructor of the 59th head of the National Revolutionary Army and made due contributions to War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression.

Shaolin Boxing, the "Yu Jia" in Guizhou, has been handed down. The first generation descendants of Shaolin Boxing are Hu Chuangang, Liu and Fu Zhizhong. The first generation of scholars taught Wen Song in Hong Kong and Taiwan and Li Lianggen in Nanchang. Liu is famous for his hard qigong and practical skills in Guizhou, and has taught nearly 2000 people. By learning from others, he found that Mr. Liang's Yu School Shaolin Boxing contains a lot of techniques such as form, meaning, gossip and Tai Chi, which have been developed after painstaking research. For example, leopard boxing, more emphasis on Xingyi boxing, as well as the technique of "collapse boxing and split boxing". In the actions of "meteor flash" and "idle breeze", the technique of crossing arms and splitting and hanging is integrated, so it is far superior to other disciples in actual combat.

The second generation scholars of Shaolin Boxing of Yu School are still engaged in teaching in Guiyang, mainly including Xu Deyong and Tang Hanhu. There are Mo Kailong and Wu Jichuan families in Hainan. There is Li Lianggen, a professor of Chinese medicine acupuncture and orthopedics in Toronto, Canada.

In addition, Mr. Liang studied Wu-style Tai Ji Chuan from Mr. Wu Quanyou's apprentice Mr. Liu, so his descendants Liu also knew a little about Wu-style Tai Ji Chuan. Later, Liu studied under Mr. Mo Kailong's father, and was regarded as a boxer who really understood Wu-style Tai Ji Chuan in Guiyang. He is currently the vice chairman of Guiyang Wushu Association and the vice chairman of Guizhou Starr Traditional Wushu Club.