Luk Ah-Choy – Wong Fei Hung Ecclectic Style(chi)

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Luk Ah-Choy – Wong Fei Hung Ecclectic Style(chi)

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Luk Ah-Choy – Wong Fei Hung Ecclectic Style(chi)

Eclectic style by Wong Fei Hung Mandarin Chinese This Southern Fists branch claims descent from the legendary Chinese folk hero Wong Fai Hung (1847-1924).
Wong Kai-Ying, one of Canton’s “Ten Tigers,” was the son of Shaolin teacher and monk Luk Ah-Choy.
Southern Shaolin is reflected in Wong’s Hung Fist, a diversified style with deep horse stances and various arm movements, some of which may be labeled Southern Long Fist.
As an active component of Hei Kung training, the verbalization of various sounds is a key part.
Hung Gar, Wing Chun, Fut Gar (Buddha style), and Lung Ying Pai are all part of this style (Southern Dragon style).
Wong Fei-hung (July 9, 1847 – May 24, 1924) was a Chinese martial artist, acupuncturist, and revolutionary who became a folk hero and the subject of multiple television programs and films.
He was regarded as a master of the Hung Ga form of Chinese martial arts.
Wong is clearly the most well-known Hung Ga practitioner of the current era.
As a result, his ancestors have garnered the greatest attention.
Wong performed and taught acupuncture and other types of traditional Chinese medicine as a physician at Po-chi-lam, his private practice medical clinic in Foshan, Guangdong, China.
In Foshan, a museum devoted to him was established.
Wong’s most renowned students included his son, Wong Hon-hei, Lam Sai-wing, Leung Foon, Tang Fung, Wong Sai-wing, and Ling Wan-kai.
Wong was also affiliated with “Beggar So” of the Canton Ten Tigers.
Wong was born in Foshan during the Qing Dynasty’s reign of the Daoguang Emperor.
He began learning Hung Ga from his father, Wong Kei-ying, when he was five years old.
He learned the Tour de Force of Iron Wire Fist and Sling at the age of 13 from Lam Fuk-sing, a pupil of “Iron Bridge Three” Leung Kwan, after encountering Lam at a martial arts street performance in Douzhixiang.
Later, he learned the Shadowless Kick from Sung Fai-tong.
Wong established his first martial arts school in Shuijiao in 1863, at the age of 17.
He launched his Po-chi-lam clinic in Ren’an 26 years later, in 1886.
Wong was asked to sing at the inaugural ceremony of the Chin Woo Athletic Association’s Guangzhou branch in 1919.
Wong died of sickness on May 24, 1924, at Guangdong’s Chengxi Fangbian Hospital.
He was laid to rest at the foot of Baiyun Mountain.
Wong’s wife, Mok Kwai-lan, and two kids, as well as his pupils Lam Sai-wing and Tang Sai-king, eventually relocated to Hong Kong and started martial arts schools.
According to tradition, Wong was hired as the Black Flag Army’s medical officer and martial arts teacher by Liu Yongfu.
Wong also taught martial arts to Guangdong’s local militia.
He had previously accompanied Liu’s army to combat the Imperial Japanese Army in Taiwan.
Wong has been married four times in his life.
On March 11, 1982, his last wife, Mok Kwai-lan, died in Hong Kong.
He has four children.
Wong Hon-sam, the oldest, was killed by a coworker in a drunken quarrel in 1923.
Wong was a Hung Ga master as a martial artist (also called Hung Fist).
He systematized Hung Ga’s dominating style and choreographed its version of the famed “Tiger Crane Paired Form Fist,” which includes his “Ten Special Fist” moves.
Wong was well-known for his ability to perform the “Shadowless Kick.”
When he accomplished his skills, he labeled the methods.
Wong was skilled with weapons such as the staff and the southern tiger fork.
One story goes that Wong used the staff to overcome a group of 30 thugs on the Guangdong docks.
Wong is occasionally mistakenly recognized as one of the “Ten Tigers of Canton.”
His father, Wong Kei-ying, was supposed to be one of the 10, but he wasn’t.
Wong is known as the “Tiger after the Ten Tigers” for his valiant attempts to safeguard Chinese honor when the Chinese faced tyranny from foreign forces.
This style is incredibly powerful and a blend of numerous powerful and well-known forms such as Hung Gar, Wing Chun, Fut Gar (Buddha style), and Lung Ying Pai (Southern Dragon style)
Road #1, Road #2, and Road #3 Chi Kung

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