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* [http://www.vingtsun.org.hk/imp_foshan.htm My Impressions of Ip Man Tong in Foshan]
* [http://www.vingtsun.org.hk/imp_foshan.htm My Impressions of Ip Man Tong in Foshan]
* [http://www.vingtsunmexico.com/ Ving Tsun Official Latin American Site]
* [http://www.vingtsunmexico.com/ Ving Tsun Official Latin American Site]
* [http://www.iucta.nl/ Yong Chun Kung Fu Holland]



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Revision as of 15:30, 15 August 2007

Yip Man
葉問
File:Yipman.jpg
Young Yip Man
Born1 October, 1893
Died2 December, 1972
Cause of deathThroat cancer
Other names葉繼問
OccupationMartial arts practitioner
TitleGung-Gung
ChildrenIp Ching & Ip Chun

Yip Man (葉問 in pinyin: yè wèn; in Jyutping: jip6 man6; alternative spelling Ip Man; also known as 葉繼問; 1 October, 1893-2 December, 1972) was the first martial arts master (Chinese: Sifu) to teach the Chinese martial art of Wing Chun openly. He had several students who later became martial arts teachers in their own right, including Bruce Lee.

Yip Man was the last Wing Chun student of Chan Wah-shun when he was 70 years old. He was the second son of a very wealthy family in Foshan, Guangdong, and received an exceptional traditional Chinese education.

Biography

When Yip Man was thirteen years old he started learning Wing Chun. Because of his sifu's old age, Yip Man learned most of his lessons from his second sihing Ng Chung-sok. After three years Chan Wah-shun died, but one of his dying wishes was to ask Ng to continue with Yip's training.

At age sixteen, Yip Man went to attend school at St. Stephen's College in Hong Kong, which was an upmarket secondary school for wealthy families and foreigners who lived in Hong Kong.

According to one story, one day one of his classmates challenged him to try his martial arts skill with an older man. The man beat him with a few strikes. It turned out that the old man was his sibak Leung Bik (梁璧), son of his sigung. After that encounter, Yip Man continued to learn from Leung Bik. At age 24, Yip Man returned to Foshan, and his Wing Chun skills had improved tremendously while he had been away. His fellow students believed he learned a different kind of martial art and treated him as a traitor to Wing Chun.

In Foshan, Yip Man didn't formally run a Wing Chun school, but taught Wing Chun to several children of his friends and relatives. Amongst those informal students, Chow Kwong-yue (周光裕 (六仔)), Kwok Fu (郭富), Lun Kai (倫佳), Chan Chi-sun (陳志新) and Lui Ying (呂應) were the most well known. Chow Kwong-yue was said to be the best student among his group of pupils, but he eventually went into commerce and dropped out of martial art all together. Kwok Fu and Lun Kai went on to teach students of their own and the Wing Chun in the Foshan and Guangdong area was mainly descended from those individuals. Chan Chi-sun died young, and Lui Ying went to Hong Kong; neither of them taking on any students.

During the Japanese occupation of China, Yip Man refused several invitations to train the Japanese troops. Instead, he returned to Hong Kong and opened a martial arts school. When he initially began the school, business was poor because his students typically stayed for only a couple of months before leaving. He moved his school to Hoi Tan Street (海壇街) in Sham Shui Po and then to Lee Tat Street (利達街) in Yau Ma Tei. By that time some of his students were trained to a sufficiently high enough skill level that they were able to start their own schools.

Some of Yip Man's students and descendants compared their skills with other martial artists in combat. Their victories over other martial artists helped to bolster Yip Man's reputation as a teacher.

In 1967, Yip Man and some of his students established the Hong Kong Ving Tsun Athletic Association (香港詠春拳體育會).

Bruce Lee, Yip Man's most famous pupil, studied under him from 1954 to 1957. When Yip Man retired, many of his students were themselves teaching Wing Chun, including Wong Shun Leung, William Cheung, Lo Man Kam (Yip Man's nephew), Moy Yat and his two sons Yip Chun and Yip Ching.

In 1972, Yip Man suffered from throat cancer and subsequently died on December 2 of that year. As a fitting obituary for the man, within the three decades of his career in Hong Kong, he established a training system for Wing Chun and Wing Tsun that eventually spread across the world.

Quote

"徒弟選擇一個好師傅, 固然困難, 但師傅選擇一個好徒弟, 更加困難。" - It is difficult for a student to pick a good teacher, but it is more difficult for a teacher to pick a good student.

Lineage

Lineage in Wing Chun
sifu Chan Wah-shun (陳華順)
other teachers second sihing Ng Chung-sok (吳仲素)
sibak Leung Bik (梁璧)
 
Yip Man (葉問)
 
known students in Foshan:
* Chow Kwong-yue (周光裕 (六仔))
Lun Gai (郭富)
Kwok Fu (倫佳)
* Chan Chi-sun (陳志新)
* Lui Ying (呂應)
known students in Hong Kong: Leung Sheung (first student)
Wang Kiu (private student)
Lok Yiu (駱耀)
Chu Shong-tin (徐尚田)
Wong Shun Leung (黃淳樑)
Ho Kam Ming
Lo Man-Kam (盧文錦)
Moy Yat (梅逸)
his son Ip Chun (葉準)
his son Ip Ching (葉正)
Yip Bo-ching (葉步青)
William Cheung Cheuk Hing (張卓興)
Chan Chi Man (陳志文)
Bruce Lee (李小龍)
Ho Kum-ming
Duncan Leung
Chow Tze Chuen
Siu Yuk Men (蕭煜民)
Ho Luen (何聯)
Tang Sang
others too numerous to list (see Branches of Wing Chun)
* denotes end of line with no student

References