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Born in Jiangsu Province in 1889, Xiong Yanghe grew up on his family’s estate. His early decades were marked by warfare among various factions within China and devastating encroachments by foreign powers as well. The worldview gave great impetus for his career choice and fated him on a course that would affect all around him.

 

Like many other well-to-do landowners at the time, Xiong’s father made sure his sons received excellent education in areas such as law, security, police administration, military theory and skills training. This included the study of martial arts. The best available masters were hired to instruct the children.

 

Xiong was well-prepared to deal with peacekeeping duties, a spectrum of criminal activities, and combat in the field. After Mao Zidong and Communist Party came to power in 1949, Xiong resigned as high-ranking military officer and migrated with over a million others to Taiwan with the Nationalist Party.

 

Xiong devoted himself to the study of Buddhism and taijiquan, writing books and teaching until his passing at age 94. With a vast experience in Chinese martial traditions, he became recognized for his embodiment of one of the most encompassing taiji systems known, including special training rarely seen in the People's Republic of China. Although his family and military history provided remarkable anecdotes, Grandmaster Xiong represents a high watermark in the history of Yang-style taijiquan whose life’s story continues to inspire generations of the more serious practitioners.

Xiong Yanghe: Family, Military Career and Taijiquan Legacy (hardbound)

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  • 6"x9" hardbound, 311 pages, 518 images

  • Foreword by Xiong Naiqi

    Preface by Michael DeMarco

    CHAPTER I: The Homeland, Family, and Military Career

    • The Xiong Family and Homestead
    • Xiong Yanghe’s Immediate Family
    • Martial Art Instructors
    • Education and Military Career

    CHAPTER II: Living, Praying, and Teaching in Taiwan

    • Refuge, Lodgings, Home
    • Buddhism in Daily Life
    • Xiong on Taijiquan Theory and Practice

    CHAPTER III: First Generation Interviews

    Lin Qingzhi, Huang Qinglin, Lin Chaolai, Huang Shumei, Chen Deyang, Zhang Hongqi, Chen Xiaoyin, Lin Shengyian, Huang Guozhi, Wu Songxing                                  

    CHAPTER IV: Xiong’s Extensive Taijiquan System

    Long Routine, Straight Sword, Push-Hands, Broadsword, Sanshou, Spear/Staff  

    CHAPTER V: Sanshou Revisited

    • Appendix A: Photographic Record
    • Appendix B: Xiong Family Lineage
    • Appendix C: List of First-Generation Disciples    
    • Bibliography                 
    • Index                 
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