Lin Zu
Lin Zu, born in Pingzhou, Nanhai, Guangdong Province, is a Chinese. Lin Shirong, the great master of Hongquan, became one of the most representative masters of the Southern Boxing school in modern times. He died in March 2012 at the age of 102.
Hongquan Wushu master
Practice martial arts
Lin Zu is the nephew of Lin Shirong, Huang Feihong's most proud disciple. He has been Lin Shirong's teaching assistant since the age of 16. At the age of 21, he has been teaching in Hong Kong for more than 50 years, and his apprentices have been in more than 60 countries and regions all over the world. All the six children learn martial arts and medicine from their father, and all the three sons have martial arts schools. Among them, Lin Zhenhui, the eldest son, has won the true biography of his father. He is now the vice president of Hong Kong Wushu Federation, the president of Hong Kong Traditional Wushu Association and the vice president of Hong Kong Wushu Sanda Association. He is the representative successor of contemporary hongjiaquan. He has taught in the United States, Canada, Europe, Southeast Asia and other places, and has made great contributions to the spread of hongjiaquan overseas.
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Lin Zu's martial arts and contributions have epoch-making achievements. He not only inherited the outstanding skills of Huang Feihong and Lin Shirong, but also established the position of Lin Hongquan in the world. At the same time, it integrates various schools of martial arts and integrates them into Lin's boxing system, which greatly enriches the content of Hongquan. It also creates many sets of self splitting routines, such as double sword vs. gun, single sword vs. gun, tiger and crane double form boxing, and adds elements such as trampoline, liujiaquan, Walker's stick to the original core martial arts such as fighting boxing, tiger and crane double form boxing, and I-fu tiger boxing. At the age of 16, he has helped Lam set up and later led the Nanwu Sports Association. He has also set up a museum in naodianzha street, Wan Chai stone water channel Street (today's blue house) and Nathan Road, Kowloon, which has spread all over the world.
Wood carving in Jiajing Dynasty of Ming Dynasty
Woodblock engravers in Suzhou and Wuxi (now Jiangsu Province). Jiajing (1522-1566) carved between Qi Cheng. Three issues of cultural relics in 1959
Chinese PinYin : Lin Zu
Lin Zu