Leung Ting
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leung Ting (1947 - Present) is the founder and permanent president of the International WingTsun Association.
Leung chose the spelling of WingTsun to differentiate his teachings from those of other Wing Chun schools, and to keep them from passing off their style as his own. (There is no standard romanization of Cantonese; the Chinese characters remain the same.)
For a time, the martial arts were seen as the activity of triad members, resulting in a strong negative association. In order to improve the image of martial arts, Leung devoted himself to promoting and teaching WingTsun. He was the first instructor to introduce any style of kung fu in an academic institution, the Baptist College in Hong Kong.
Among the achievements in his career outside of teaching and writting about WingTsun, Leung has been a fight director in some Hong Kong films.
Leung appeared on episode 1 of the first season of the BBC show Mind, Body & Kick Ass Moves; a 10 part series on martial arts masters of the east hosted by Chris Crudelli.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Lineage
Lineage in Wing Chun | |
sifu | Yip Man |
sihing | Leung Sheung |
Leung Ting |
|
training partner | Cheng Chuen Fun (Hong Kong) |
known students | Keith R. Kernspecht (Germany), Slavko Truntic (Croatia), Norbert Maday (Hungary), Elmond Leung (Hong Kong and USA), Jeff Webb (USA), William Parker (USA), Mike Adams (USA) |
[edit] Controversy
Leung claims to be the last closed door disciple of the late Yip Man, though some of Yip Man's students have disputed whether he ever even studied with Yip. This controversy was further fuelled in part by allegations that photos that Leung has presented showing him with Yip Man were doctored or altered from photographs that show Yip with someone else[1] . Leung, in turn, has denied the head change.[2] It is also important to note that this is not the only photograph linking Yip Man to Leung, nor is the claim denying that he had contact or paid for lessons with him.
[edit] References
- ^ A Scandal of the Wing-Chun School (1979-09-05). Retrieved on 2006-11-20.
- ^ Senft, Markus (1999-09-05). The Change-head Incident Interview. Retrieved on 2006-11-20.
[edit] External links
This biographical article related to martial arts is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |