Wu Kung-tsao

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Wu.
This article contains Chinese text.
Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Chinese characters.
Wu Kung-tsao吳公藻
Wu Kung-tsao吳公藻

Wu Kung-tsao 吳公藻 (19021983) whose name is also spelled Wu Gongzao, Wu Kung Cho or Wu Kung Jo, was a famous Chinese teacher of T'ai Chi Ch'uan in Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong. The second son of Wu Chien-ch'üan, 吳鑑泉 (1870-1942), he was the grandson of the first teacher of Wu style T'ai Chi Ch'uan, Wu Ch'uan-yü 吳全佑 (1834-1902). Wu Kung-tsao was the younger brother of Wu Kung-i 吳公儀 (1900-1970) and the older brother of Wu Ying-hua (吳英華 1906-1996). The Wu family were originally of Manchu ancestry.

As a young man, he studied T'ai Chi, along with his brother, under the supervision of Yang Shao-hou 楊少侯 (1862-1930). There was an old tradition in the Chinese martial arts that youngsters be taught by teachers of a generation older than their parents'. Since Wu Ch'uan-yü had died the same year Wu Kung-tsao was born, he and his brother were taught by Yang Shao-hou, who was technically a generation senior to their father. Both Yang Shao-hou and Wu Chien-ch'üan were famous for their "small circle" martial expertise. The motions of T'ai Chi forms and pushing hands are all based on different sized circles, small circle movements in the forms and applications follow a more compact pathway for different leverage applications than larger circles.

In the 1920s Wu Kung-tsao served first as an infantry officer in the Thirteenth Brigade of the Nationalist army, then later as a martial art instructor to various Kuomintang military academies as well as an instructor for the famous Ching Wu martial art school. During the 1930s, he wrote a well-known commentary on the classic writings in 40 chapters on T'ai Chi Ch'uan that his grandfather had inherited from Yang Pan-hou 楊班侯 (1837-1890). His commentary (including the original 40 chapters) was published as Wu Chia T'ai Chi Ch'uan (吳家太極拳, Wu family T'ai Chi Ch'uan), also known by English speakers as The Gold Book because of the colour of its cover. In 1937, he established his family's first school in Hong Kong. In addition to his teaching and literary contributions to the art, Wu Kung-tsao became known as a specialist in the nei kung aspect of T'ai Chi training, both for martial purposes and for therapeutic interventions along the lines of traditional Chinese medicine.

Wu Kung-tsao stayed on the mainland after the Chinese Communist takeover in 1949. During and for a short time after the Cultural Revolution of 1964-1978 he was imprisoned by the Red Guards due to his history as a Nationalist military officer, a traditional Confucian scholar and Taoist teacher as well as a hostage to ensure the "good behaviour" of the rest of his family who were at the time living in Shanghai and Hong Kong. He was routinely tortured while a prisoner but was finally released in 1980, when he moved again to Hong Kong.

Wu Kung-tsao's second son Wu Ta-hsin (Wu Daxin 吳大新 1933-2005) was also known as an expert martial artist and teacher who in his turn was senior instructor of the Wu family schools internationally from 2001 until 2005.

[edit] References

  • Wu Kung-tsao. Wu Family T'ai Chi Ch'uan (吳家太極拳), Hong Kong, 1980.
  • Journal of Asian Martial Arts Volume 15, No. 1, 2006. Via Media Publishing, Erie Pennsylvania USA. ISSN 1057-8358

[edit] External links