Wang Ziping (1881-1973), a native of Yihe Street, Cangzhou, is the vice chairman of the Chinese Wushu Association and the chief referee of the first National Games. 19 19, defeated Russian strongman Cantel, who is known as "the strongest man in the world", in Wang Ziping. 1 92 1 year, American Sullivan and others were scared away at the Shanghai World Arena.
1923, Wang founded China Wushu Club. 1928 Served as curator of Shaolin Temple in Nanjing Central Martial Arts School, and later served as deputy curator. During the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, Wang Ziping donated artillery. Since then, he has been devoted to excavating the treasure house of Chinese Wushu and popularizing it.
2. Strong Iron Man Ding Faxiang
Ding Faxiang (1615-1694), a native of Mengcun, originally lived in Ding Zhuangzi, and later moved to Mengcun Town. Ding is charitable, quiet and introverted, and has the demeanor of a hermit and a gentleman. In the 15th year of Kangxi, two Russian Hercules came to China, set up a challenge in Beijing, regarded Yan Huang's descendants as dirt, and even wounded several boxers in China.
Ding Fei took the stage to answer the phone, and the two men were knocked down after several confrontations. Ding Faxiang even defeated his opponent, made great contributions to the country and excited the masses. Emperor Kangxi was very happy and summoned him to give him an award. Once, princes and ministers gave him a poem tablet.
3. The magical Li Gun Wen Shu
Li (1864— 1942) was born in Wangnanliang Village, Shengfo Town, Cangxian County. When Yuan Shikai was training in a small station, Japanese instructors insulted Li as the sick man of East Asia, and Li picked four men with guns. Since then, "Shen Qiang Li" has become famous all over the world. Russian boxing champion Marotov came to Beijing to set up a game, and the martial arts masters in Beijing and Tianjin both lost. Li took the stage to beat Malov off the court and proclaimed the Golden Buddha as a reward.
He was hired by Zhang as the chief martial artist of the three armed forces. In the army, Li defied the Japanese military instructor with his bare hands, broke his shoulder blades and defended his national prestige. Li Hsing has been wandering the Jianghu for 40 years and has become a great master. His disciples Huo Diange, Liu Yunqiao and Li Yuhai are famous at home and abroad.
4. Guo Changsheng the Swallow
Guo Changsheng (1896— 1967), a native of Madao Street in Cangzhou City, was called "Guo Yanzi" because Guo Hangquan missed. 1928, taught Miao Dao in the central martial arts museum, and in the first national examination, he was ranked in the top 17 with unbeaten record (this 17 people stopped fighting for some reason), so General Feng Yuxiang personally gave Longquan a sword.
Guo compiled and created excellent routines such as Two Miao Dao and Miao Dao into a Gun, and also revised and created routines such as Hanging Boxing and Crazy Magic Rod, which are equivalent to Ma Yingtu. After the July 7th Incident broke out, Guo closed his door for eight years and refused to work for the Japanese troops stationed in Cang.
5. Wu Zhong, the ancestor of octupole
Wu Zhong (1712-1802), a native of Zhuangke Village, Yanshan Mountain, created a new open-door octupole boxing. In the 13th year of Yongzheng, Wuzhong single-handedly broke into Shaolin, with a big gun, and breached Sanmen, with numerous hidden weapons, and was praised as a "warrior gun" by an imperial envoy from Paul. Wuzhong once went to Shaolin Temple in Quanzhou, Fujian alone, and broke into Luohantang at night to get a fish whip.
Wu Hou competed with fourteen sons of Emperor Kangxi in marksmanship. The two of them were better at fighting (bamboo weapons with sharp edges and no tips), and fourteen sons were knocked unconscious before they knew it. From time to time, there is a proverb that "from Nanjing to Beijing, cannons count in Wuzhong". Wuzhong spread Bajiquan in Mengcun and made indelible contributions to the development of Wushu.