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  2. Chen Zhenglei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen_Zhenglei

    Chen Zhenglei (born 15 May 1949) is a Chinese taijiquan Grandmaster, who was born and raised in Chenjiagou (Chen Village, 陳家溝), Wen County, Henan Province, China, and is the 19th generation descendent of the Chen family and 11th generation direct-line successor of Chen Family Taijiquan Chen-style taijiquan. His teachers were Chen Zhaopi ...

  3. Chen Wangting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen_Wangting

    Chen Wangting (1580–1660), courtesy name Chen Zouting, was a Ming dynasty military officer who may have founded Chen-style tai chi, one of the five major styles of the popular Chinese martial art. He reputedly devised his style of tai chi after his retirement following the fall of the Ming dynasty.

  4. Chen Xiaowang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen_Xiaowang

    Chen Xiaowang (born 20 October 1945) [1] is an Australian-Chinese tai chi teacher, who was born and raised in Chen Family Village (Chenjiagou, 陳家溝), Wen County, Henan province, and is the 19th generation lineage holder of Chen-style tai chi. His grandfather was the Chinese martial artist and tai chi grandmaster Chen Fake.

  5. Chen Fake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen_Fake

    Chen Fake (Chinese: 陳發科; Wade–Giles: Ch'en Fa-k'e; 1887–1957), courtesy name Chen Fusheng (福生), was a Chinese martial artist who taught Chen-style tai chi. [1] He was born and raised in Chen Family Village (Chenjiagou, 陳家溝) in Henan province.

  6. Chen-style tai chi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen-style_tai_chi

    Chen-style Xinyi Hunyuan tai chi (陈式心意混元太极拳), called Hunyuan tai chi for short, was created by Feng Zhiqiang (冯志强; 1928–2012; 10th generation master of Chen-style tai chi and 2nd generation master of Beijing Chen-style tai chi), [51] one of Chen Fake's senior students and a student of Hu Yaozhen (胡耀貞; 1897–1973).

  7. Chen Qingping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen_Qingping

    Chen Qingping or Ch'en Ch'ing-p'ing (1795–1868) was a 15th generation descendant and 7th generation master of the Chen family tai chi, which he learned from Chen Youben, and the 7th generation successor of the Zhaobao style of tai chi, which he learned from Zhang Yan. He was an influential martial artist and teacher of tai chi.

  8. Tai Chi 0 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tai_Chi_0

    Tai Chi 1: 0 (太極之零開始) or Tai Chi Zero (太極:從零開始) is a 2012 Chinese 3D martial arts film directed by Stephen Fung. [1] [2] [3] It is a fictitious account of how the Chen style of the martial art tai chi, that had for generations remained within the Chen family of Chenjiagou, was taught to the first outsider, Yang Luchan, by Chen Changxing.

  9. The Master of Tai Chi (TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Master_of_Tai_Chi_(TV...

    The Master of Tai Chi (Traditional Chinese: 太極) is a Hong Kong martial arts television drama that aired on Jade and HD Jade from 25 February to 28 March 2008. Produced by Tommy Leung and Raymond Chai, The Master of Tai Chi is a TVB production. The drama was filmed in early 2006, and is the station's first high-definition series that was ...