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Chan Tai-San : ウィキペディア英語版
Chan Tai San

Chan Tai San (Chan Tai-San; Chinese: 陳泰山) (July 12, 1920 – September 1, 2004) was a Chinese martial arts grandmaster.〔Yee's Hung Ga Association newsletter.〕 Often called one of China's 'living treasures,' Chan was featured as such on the cover of ''Inside Kung Fu'' magazine in 1996.〔Cater, Dave (1996): "Chan Tai San's Journey of a Lifetime," ''Inside Kung Fu'' (October 1996), pp. 38–41.〕
==Early training and military service==
Chan said he began Kung fu training at age eight under Yee Hoi-Long, a stonemason who worked for the Chan family.〔 Yee taught 'Hung Fist', also called 'Hung Kuyhnn' or 'village style,' a forerunner to Hung Ga, and 'Hung Tao Choy Mei' (which means 'Hung Head Choy Tail'), later known as Jow Ga, a system combining strong ''Hung'' style fist work with active Choy-style footwork. Chan learned from Yee for about six years.〔
Chan was 13 when, after the death of his father, he was sent by his family to the Clear Cloud Temple where he began training in Kung fu and Buddhism and was mostly a student of Jyu Jik Chuyhn (朱亦傳).〔〔Parrella, M.: (Chan Tai San's lineage ) Retrieved on 27 December 2009.〕〔''Inside Kung Fu'' (October 1989).〕 Chan was also taught by the monk Gaai Si Wu Song and trained mostly in the Choy Lay Fut style.〔Cater, Dave (1993): "A Tradition Whose Time has Come", ''Inside Kung Fu'' (September 1993), p. 56.〕
At 17 Chan Tai San left the monastery to fight against the Imperial Japanese Army, enlisting in a peasant division which also had some of the most skilled traditional martial arts fighters in China. While in the army Chan Tai San trained and served with Cheung Lai-Chung (Bak Mei, 'White eyebrow' style), Baahk Mo Jyu (nicknamed the "White Haired Devil," Hung Fut style) and others.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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